Snowfire
Member
I recently shot a roll of Delta 3200 (exp. 2009 but kept in freezer) on an old camera with which I am not yet familiar. I processed it at box speed in Microphen (9 min. full strength at 20C, motorized agitation.) It came out a bit gnarly--there is what looks like some of the worst base fog I have seen in a long while, and the images are distinctly on the faint side, even allowing for the base fog. Two other rolls of film were in the same developing batch (including a 35mm non-expired Delta 3200 roll) and they came out looking reasonably normal, so I don't think my darkroom technique is to blame. I wondered if it might be a light leak in the camera, but in my experience light leaks show variation--streaks, blotches, gradients, repeating patterns. This is more like a perfectly even, uniform fogging over the entire roll. I guess this film has some serious age issues? I have processed much more severely expired films (including some Konica IR from 1993) and not seen base fog this bad, so I wonder.
I don't want to just toss this film in the wastebasket, as I have about 9 rolls left. What to do, assuming it is the film? I am thinking about pulling the processing to ISO 800 and then shooting the film at ISO 200 to see if that improves things. Is this a rational strategy, or are there other tricks I am missing?
I don't want to just toss this film in the wastebasket, as I have about 9 rolls left. What to do, assuming it is the film? I am thinking about pulling the processing to ISO 800 and then shooting the film at ISO 200 to see if that improves things. Is this a rational strategy, or are there other tricks I am missing?