Ivo Stunga
Member
Rollei Retro 80S and RPX 25 is the same film: Aviphot Pan 80, just repackaged and sold with imaginary ISO's and random dev times by Rollei.Can you give me some guidelines for exposure / processing. I think that I have read elsewhere that the same film was marketed as RPX 25 by Rollei.
Many sources quote that Aviphot "80" is a aerial rating where you don't need much shadow detail.
For pictorial contrast or "on earth" though, one need those shadows. And a lot of shadows, as ISO standard is tied to shadow exposure if I'm not mistaken. Sooo, to achieve pictorial ISO and give shadows a chance, one must expose Aviphot a stop or two slower. Making Rollei RPX 25 rating quite apt, but Retro 80S - a hard miss.
And HR-50 / Scala 50 is reworked/ISO boosted Aviphot Pan 80, targeting ISO 50 for pictorial contrast. And cheaper than Rollei offering lol - so I choose Scala 50/HR-50 as the best iteration of Aviphot 80 in 135 consumer market.
Similarly with other Rollei products. Rollei isn't a film coater. Rollei was a camera manufacturer. And film is sold by rolleianalog... So they don't make their own films.
Superpan 200, Retro 400S and Infrared 400 - all the same emulsion in different boxes with different look and pricing: Avihot Pan 200
Rollei RPX 100 and 400? It's repackaged Kentmere 100 and 400...
Source?
- talk on photrio and elsewhere:

Here: List of repackaged Agfa Aviphot Pan 80 and 200 films and Kentmere 100 and 400 films
I just want to fulfill a wish by some forum members and a moderator: Here is the list of current repackaged (rebranded) Agfa Aviphot Pan 80 and 200 films and Kentmere 100 and 400 films: Agfa Aviphot Pan 80: Repackaged as Rollei Retro 80s and Rollei RPX 25. Agfa Aviphot Pan 200: Repackaged as...

- Curves and spectral sensitivity data gathered The Naked Photographer on YouTube show the same performance regardless of what he saw in each individual case not suspecting it being the same film...
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