I have a litre of ID-68, mixed from raw chemicals. Developing time recommendation I found was to use times for Microphen. First couple of rolls of HP5+, developed for 6.5 minutes in stock developer turned out fine.
The Ilford datasheet for Microphen recommends a 10% increase in development time for each subsequent roll of film in one litre of stock, so for the third roll of HP5+ I need 6.5 minutes+10%+10%, which comes to 7 minutes 52 seconds. This roll was exposed by a friend in a variety of lighting conditions. All images are printable, but a lot are biased towards dark negatives - could be over development, could be overexposure. So the next roll was from said friend's Kiev 60, and had been in there for over two years! She thought it was HP5+, and we forgot to check the backing paper, so added another 10% to the developing time to give 8 minutes 39 seconds. The negatives looked fine, well exposed and properly developed, maybe a little dense, but on closer inspection it turned out that the film was FP4+, which has a development time of 8 minutes in Microphen, so should have been noticeably undeveloped because it was the fourth roll through the same litre of stock ID-68. So it seems like the correct development time is not increasing as I reuse the developer stock, or at least not increasing by 10% per developed roll.
Have I misunderstood the Ilford datasheet, about increasing development times when reusing stock Microphen? Otherwise, should ID-68 be treated differently in this respect? Should I just keep using the same times no matter how many times I reuse the developer (of course there will be an upper limit)?
Thanks,
Ian
The Ilford datasheet for Microphen recommends a 10% increase in development time for each subsequent roll of film in one litre of stock, so for the third roll of HP5+ I need 6.5 minutes+10%+10%, which comes to 7 minutes 52 seconds. This roll was exposed by a friend in a variety of lighting conditions. All images are printable, but a lot are biased towards dark negatives - could be over development, could be overexposure. So the next roll was from said friend's Kiev 60, and had been in there for over two years! She thought it was HP5+, and we forgot to check the backing paper, so added another 10% to the developing time to give 8 minutes 39 seconds. The negatives looked fine, well exposed and properly developed, maybe a little dense, but on closer inspection it turned out that the film was FP4+, which has a development time of 8 minutes in Microphen, so should have been noticeably undeveloped because it was the fourth roll through the same litre of stock ID-68. So it seems like the correct development time is not increasing as I reuse the developer stock, or at least not increasing by 10% per developed roll.
Have I misunderstood the Ilford datasheet, about increasing development times when reusing stock Microphen? Otherwise, should ID-68 be treated differently in this respect? Should I just keep using the same times no matter how many times I reuse the developer (of course there will be an upper limit)?
Thanks,
Ian
