Hi all,
thought you might be interested in these results. I usually shoot Ilford Delta 3200 at concerts but was interested to give Kodak P3200 a go. I had some Delta 3200 in my Nikon F3, so used that on the first set, then switched to P3200 and carried on. Both rolls were both exposed and developed at box speed in Microphen using Ilford's recommended times, 9 mins for Delta 3200 and 12 mins for P3200. I've selected two frames with similar compositions (all scanning settings were the same). The lighting, exposure etc etc were all the same. P3200 is at left, Delta 3200 at right. My feeling is that the grain on the Delta is finer, less pronounced, and that Delta can hang onto the highlights and still keep shadow detail but looks a little more 'muddy', P3200 has crisper grain and more punch but shadows block up. The P3200 got three more minutes in the soup mind you. Results are close but personally I think I slightly prefer the P3200 but it's likely differences could disappear in printing.

thought you might be interested in these results. I usually shoot Ilford Delta 3200 at concerts but was interested to give Kodak P3200 a go. I had some Delta 3200 in my Nikon F3, so used that on the first set, then switched to P3200 and carried on. Both rolls were both exposed and developed at box speed in Microphen using Ilford's recommended times, 9 mins for Delta 3200 and 12 mins for P3200. I've selected two frames with similar compositions (all scanning settings were the same). The lighting, exposure etc etc were all the same. P3200 is at left, Delta 3200 at right. My feeling is that the grain on the Delta is finer, less pronounced, and that Delta can hang onto the highlights and still keep shadow detail but looks a little more 'muddy', P3200 has crisper grain and more punch but shadows block up. The P3200 got three more minutes in the soup mind you. Results are close but personally I think I slightly prefer the P3200 but it's likely differences could disappear in printing.



