Darkroom317
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Foma films build up contrast far faster than any other make they need about 75% less development (time) to achieve similar tonality and about half the film speed. . . Ian
I think there's a big difference whether you agitate every 30 seconds or every 5 minutes.15 minutes, that sounds like quite a long time. The published times I've seen range from 7-10 minutes for N development. What EI are you shooting at and what temperature is your developer? MCP 310 is the paper that I have just switched to.
I'm trying to picture taking 10 seconds to invert the tank. 5 seconds on the way down, then 5 seconds on the way up? Would be like slow-motion, yes?I am doing 10 seconds, every minute. Usually with just one full inversion each minute.
Agitation should NOT be vigourous.
Update.
I started by cleaning the mouth of my bottle of Rodinal. Dried up Rodinal had coated this area. I also cleaned out the small beaker I measure it with. I often don't do this between films but I cleaning right after I mixed the developer with water. I also tapped the tank after the first 30 sec of development as well as before.
I then used water as stop instead of stop bath. I continued with the agitation time of 10 sec every minute but with far more vigorous agitation. So far all of these problems have resolved.
This has certainly made me more cautious when developing my film.
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