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hp5 developing in 510 pyro

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w rollinson

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could anybody give me a rough starting time for hp5 in 510 pyro ,120 film i know everybodys different but there are no times at the massive dev chart for this thanks ,wayne
 

jstraw

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For standard agitation at 68 degrees (30 seconds initial, 10 seconds every minute) I've been using eight minutes for 1:100 dilution with a two minute presoak. I start timing when the pour-in is finished and begin pouring out at 7:45.

I'm now working on my time for rotary development...something near 6 1/2 minutes....
 
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w rollinson

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thanks thats great is a presoak nessesery i have been using hp5 in 35mm but i have never done a soak (is there a reason for soaking) thanks wayne
 

thefizz

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thanks thats great is a presoak nessesery i have been using hp5 in 35mm but i have never done a soak (is there a reason for soaking) thanks wayne

It washes off the anti-halation layer but more importantly it helps to bring the film to the correct temperature.

Peter
 

jstraw

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It washes off the anti-halation layer but more importantly it helps to bring the film to the correct temperature.

Peter

It also saturates the emulsion. Thoroughly wetting it can help prevent airbells (bubbles...creating voids in the development)...as I recently learned by not having a true presoak before rotary development.
 

juan

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Just to stir the pot, I'll point out that Ilford recommends NO presoak on any of their films. I've never really understood why and presoak myself.
juan
 

John Bond

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In part, the answer depends on if you plan to print on graded paper or variable contrast paper. For graded paper, 6min, 30 seconds should be close. For variable contrast paper, seven minutes or a little longer might be better unless you prefer to increase the contrast filtration on your enlarger to 3.5 or more. I have recently tried semi stand development with great results- 1:500 for aobut 45 minutes with three gentle agitations.
 

mikebarger

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I have to say my experience is following John's comments. I FINALLY have the darkroom up and running and negatives are requiring more filtration than I would have guessed.

I going to bump up my development time, actually use Picker's test for development time, to get closer to normal.

Mike
 

jstraw

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In part, the answer depends on if you plan to print on graded paper or variable contrast paper. For graded paper, 6min, 30 seconds should be close. For variable contrast paper, seven minutes or a little longer might be better unless you prefer to increase the contrast filtration on your enlarger to 3.5 or more. I have recently tried semi stand development with great results- 1:500 for aobut 45 minutes with three gentle agitations.

John, that's how I process my FP4+ sheet film...50 rather than 45 minutes though. Initial 30 seconds, then four inversions at 12.5, 25 and 37.5 minutes.
 
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