I have tried Ultramax T-Grain 400 & B & W 125 and it is a nice film to work with. Always have a bulk rll availible. The paper is nothing great.
There is no edge makings on any. BUT what I have read is the 125 is FOMAPAN ?? The T-Grain has good contrast when develoiped with their developer (A bastard child of D-76) Very fine grain and does not curl. (35mm that is) AND they will send it to Canada without having to take out a second morgage on my house.. This is my 3rd bulk roll and I will be doing more.
Me, if it's Plus-X.They don't make a 125, unless Ultrafine is fudging. Nor do they make a T-grain, which Uf is selling.
It pretty much has to be Plus-X or FP4.
Any takers?
Me, if it's Plus-X.
One of the European manufacturers supposedly makes/made a t-grain film...
Well I bought a roll of UTRAFINE B & W 125 And rolls of ULTRAMAX ISO 400 T-Grain Film 35mm X 100' Cat #615-9400. I am sitting beside the empty square box as I type. Like I said there are no markings on the boarders of the film just numbers.
Several years ago I bought a few boxes of the 4x5 sheet Ultrafine 125. The word going around was that it was FP4+. Presumably the only other possibility would have been Plus-X Pan; I'm not sure when that was discontinued. The notch code is not the same as FP4+, but I suppose if Ultrafine was doing the cutting themselves they wouldn't use that notch code anyway. I used the FP4+ developing times off the Massive Dev Chart and they worked fine.
A few months ago I ordered three of the bulk rolls of APX 100; it was shipped in black plastic (round) cans, not the square ones Jim Appleyard had problems with. The exp. date on them is 11/2010, but I've put them on ice so hopefully they'll last a while.
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