kb244
Member
Yesterday I received a recently (November 2016 by Eric Hendrickson) CLA'd Pentax MX with a Pentax-M 28/3.5, I already had three Pentax Mount lens (Pentax-M 50/1.4, Rokinon 85/1.4, Tamron SP Adaptall 90/2.8 1:1 Macro) hence the reason was looking for an SLR counterpart to my rangefinders. Plus the general consensus was they had very large/bright viewfinders, but I also wanted to make sure it was fully mechanical outside of the meter.
I went with a formula I found on filmdev.org which calls for stock solution of Microphen for 7 minutes at 68F, course what I didn't realize was that when I set the film speed on top, I must have bumped too far or wasn't attentive enough to notice I put it 2 dots past 400 and was metering for ISO 640. Results still came out, and the massive dev chart shows 640 at 8 minutes, so that explains some head scratching when I was thinking the meter was going a little higher than my guesstimate would have figured.
I'm curious though if the standard 01 screen is sufficient enough for focusing with the f/1.4 lens, I feel like result wise it's not spot on the exact spot, but I was relying more on the microprism ring than the split line, guessing the split is more accurate to "see" in those cases. Though would like to try to see if I can find an SA-3 screen (designed specifically for lens with a maximum aperture of f/1.2 to f2).
I scanned these on my home Canon FS4000US scanner which I prefer over the school's flatbed, but later tonight will be doing some wet printing (some of these might look pretty nice on the Oriental Seagull VC RC II paper I recently got). A number of them are at the GRAM (Grand Rapids Art Museum), then headed back towards campus to snap some spots I usually snap. Most the indoor ones were shot at f/1.4~2, and 1/60th~1/125.
I went with a formula I found on filmdev.org which calls for stock solution of Microphen for 7 minutes at 68F, course what I didn't realize was that when I set the film speed on top, I must have bumped too far or wasn't attentive enough to notice I put it 2 dots past 400 and was metering for ISO 640. Results still came out, and the massive dev chart shows 640 at 8 minutes, so that explains some head scratching when I was thinking the meter was going a little higher than my guesstimate would have figured.
I'm curious though if the standard 01 screen is sufficient enough for focusing with the f/1.4 lens, I feel like result wise it's not spot on the exact spot, but I was relying more on the microprism ring than the split line, guessing the split is more accurate to "see" in those cases. Though would like to try to see if I can find an SA-3 screen (designed specifically for lens with a maximum aperture of f/1.2 to f2).
I scanned these on my home Canon FS4000US scanner which I prefer over the school's flatbed, but later tonight will be doing some wet printing (some of these might look pretty nice on the Oriental Seagull VC RC II paper I recently got). A number of them are at the GRAM (Grand Rapids Art Museum), then headed back towards campus to snap some spots I usually snap. Most the indoor ones were shot at f/1.4~2, and 1/60th~1/125.














