Ok extremely stupid question to resurrect this thread - I've processed one roll of this in HC-110 (@400) and quite liked the results. I've heard tell that you can expose at several different speeds on the same roll if processing in C-41 chemicals. Can the same be said for HC-110, with results within reason? It seems doubtful, but who knows. I could, of course, try it out myself...I just wish it were like $1 cheaper!
This ability to "exposed at different speeds" is called "latitude" and XP2 has about as much of it as any film I've seen. Yes, it has similar latitude in B&W chemistry. The page Ilford links about this from their web site shows results shooting XP2 at EI from 50 to 1600 -- that +3 and -2 stops exposure vs. box speed -- all processed in HC-110. It also works in other developers; I've done it in Df96 monobath (though I recommend doubling the process time, apparently it fixes like T-grain film). For processes that aren't self-timing like monobath, I recall it uses the same process time as T-Max 400.
So given the very good results of XP2 Super in some b&w developers what are the drawbacks compared to development in C41?
Has anyone ever taken the same scene shot on 2 XP2 Super films, developed each in C41 and b&w developer to compare the results?
Thanks
pentaxuser
The main difference is grain. XP2 Super has extremely fine grain (finer than TMY or Delta 400) in C-41, and if shot at EI 200 has even less -- virtually grainless. In B&W chemistry, you have a silver image (albeit one fairly similar to Delta 400), and there will be grain; further, in C-41, more exposure tends to
reduce grain (as is the case with most color negative films), while in B&W, more exposure tends to increase the appearance of grain.
Of course, you can combine the two as well; I routinely process XP2 Super in Flexicolor with bleach bypass, retaining the silver image mingled with the dye cloud image; this lets the dye image partially mask the appearance of grain, but gives extra density (equivalent to increased true speed) -- so it's like getting an ISO 800 film with the grain of an ISO 100 cubic grain emulsion. In fact, this is almost the only way I shoot and process XP2 Super at present. I can do B&W an EI400 for about half the price, with bulk loaded .EDU Ultra 400 -- but to get a stop faster with less grain is sometimes worth the extra cost.