There is an advantage to plotting the correction vs the indicated exposure. You need plot only one line, either on linear or log-log paper, which we will call "Basic correction". On log-log paper it is a straight line with a slope of 1.62 inches (or cm) rise per inch (or cm) run, as they say in surveying. It passes through 1 second correction at 1 second indicated. On linear graph paper, you calculate enough points to define the line for an imaginary film with a reciprocity correction of 1 second at 1 second indicated exposure. This calculation is easy on a TI-30 pocket calculator. Basic correction = indicated time ^ 1.618.
For each film there is a film factor that is multiplied by the basic correction to get the actual correction. This value is added to the indicated time to get the corrected exposure time. Film factors must be defined by experiment.
I have provided a table of values that you can plot on either form of graph paper. If you know any reciprocity correction for any indicated time for any film, you can calculate the film factor by simply dividing the actual correction by the basic correction that you read from the graph for that indicated time. For example, if I know that the exposure time for my film is 20 seconds at 16 seconds indicated, the actual correction is 4 seconds, the basic correction is 88.8 seconds, and the film factor is thus 4/88.8 or 0.045. This film factor then allows you to estimate the reciprocity correction for that film for any desired indicated time. In the example case, an indicated exposure of 32 seconds would have a basic correction of 273 seconds which multiplied by the film factor od 0.045 gives a correction of 12.3 seconds for a total exposure of 44.3 seconds.
Let me restate what we have so far. Given a plot of basic reciprocity corrections in the form of an increment to be added to the time indicated by your light meter, and a film factor for a particular film, you can read the basic correction for the indicated time, multiply it by the film factor and add the result to the indicated time to get the time you should use. For any film, if you know the reciprocity correction for a given indicated time, you can get its film factor by dividing the actual correction by the basic correction from the graph.
All of this is empirical of course. It fits the films for which I have data with practical accuracy. The fact that the same basic curve works with both traditional and tabular grain films of two different manufacturers lends some degree of confidence to the method.
For most users of view cameras, changing aperture to correct for reciprocity is not a desirable option. The exposure time adjustments determined by Howard Bond and represented by these charts and graphs will assure the retention of shadow detail.
CHART FOR ESTIMATING CORRECTIONS FOR RECIPROCITY FAILURE
Indicated Basic For this film: Multiply by
time, seconds correction
1 1 400TX...........................0.17
1.4 1.7 400TMAX, 100TMAX.........0.07
2 3.1 HP5+.............................0.11
2.8 5.4 100Delta........................0.05
4 9.4
5.6 16.5
8 28.9
11 50.6
16 88.8
22 155
32 273
45 477
64 836
90 1465
128 2567
180 4497
256 7880
Multiply the basic correction by the factor for your film and add it to the indicated time.For example, if your light meter says you need 16 seconds for 400TX, the corrected time would be 88.8 X .17 + 16 = 31 seconds.