- Joined
- Sep 4, 2003
- Messages
- 2,021
- Format
- Multi Format
I have been doing some testing with a few films to screw down dev times under various conditions and have spent a long time staring that the negs under a 10x loupe. The testing involved shooting the same scene again and again and of course developing the film. What struck me was that the resolution difference between films of the same speed was much larger than I had expected, two in particular. I used:
TriX 400
Neopan 400
Delta 400
It was not so much the fact that delta had a far higher resolution that amazed me, but rather how poorly TriX fared compared to the Neopan. I was shooting using a Mamiya 7 handheld at between 1/250 and 1/500th with a 65mm lens at F11, leaning on a low wall. The scene had a number of small trees with well defined frond like leaves which were ideal for observing reolving power (not my original goal). There was also a fair amount of barbed wire/spiked railings at anything from 70-100m.
If one put the Delta 400 at 10, the Neopan would score 8 and the TriX 4.
This is a subjective scale, but the pattern is consistent across over a dozen rolls. Neopan 400 hammers TriX for resolution and is not embarrassed by Delta 400, although the latter does have a clearly identifiable edge in the finest detail. After looking at the neopan negs you really do wonder what is wrong with the TriX; it is clear that if just does not have nearly the same inherent resolution. Negs were put through Xtol 1+2 and DDX 1+6.5 and the result was the same.
Just another comment is how well the Delta 400 performs. It is not too 'hot' at all and is far more controllable than its 100 speed sibling. It behaves more or less like a traditional 400 speed film and after shooting some against the Afghan sun and under various conditions I am amazed at how flexible it is. If you are used to traditional films and are worried about finicky modern emulsions, this one is well worth a go. Although I have yet to test, I bet its resolution gives Fp4+ a run for the money...or more.
As for speed I get better speed in both Neopan and Delta 400 than TriX (about 1/3 stop slower than the other two). I comfortably get box speed out of D400 and Neopan, but then again I do develop about 10-20% longer than the manufacturers times because of a very soft 10x8 enlarger head and that will undoubteldy give me more speed than the usually severe cuts for condensor users (g1 on my condensor= about g4 on my colour head...)
Now I know why people like pushing TriX over Neopan too, esp when over 800. Neopan quickly keeps building highlight density with development time, whereas TriX is a lower contrast film which picks up some shadow density without going nuts in the highlights. Seems that I could add another 50% to my already long TriX times and it would still be a cinch to print. This is a seriously tolerant film, which up until now I have only used in a fairly conventional way.
TriX 400
Neopan 400
Delta 400
It was not so much the fact that delta had a far higher resolution that amazed me, but rather how poorly TriX fared compared to the Neopan. I was shooting using a Mamiya 7 handheld at between 1/250 and 1/500th with a 65mm lens at F11, leaning on a low wall. The scene had a number of small trees with well defined frond like leaves which were ideal for observing reolving power (not my original goal). There was also a fair amount of barbed wire/spiked railings at anything from 70-100m.
If one put the Delta 400 at 10, the Neopan would score 8 and the TriX 4.
This is a subjective scale, but the pattern is consistent across over a dozen rolls. Neopan 400 hammers TriX for resolution and is not embarrassed by Delta 400, although the latter does have a clearly identifiable edge in the finest detail. After looking at the neopan negs you really do wonder what is wrong with the TriX; it is clear that if just does not have nearly the same inherent resolution. Negs were put through Xtol 1+2 and DDX 1+6.5 and the result was the same.
Just another comment is how well the Delta 400 performs. It is not too 'hot' at all and is far more controllable than its 100 speed sibling. It behaves more or less like a traditional 400 speed film and after shooting some against the Afghan sun and under various conditions I am amazed at how flexible it is. If you are used to traditional films and are worried about finicky modern emulsions, this one is well worth a go. Although I have yet to test, I bet its resolution gives Fp4+ a run for the money...or more.
As for speed I get better speed in both Neopan and Delta 400 than TriX (about 1/3 stop slower than the other two). I comfortably get box speed out of D400 and Neopan, but then again I do develop about 10-20% longer than the manufacturers times because of a very soft 10x8 enlarger head and that will undoubteldy give me more speed than the usually severe cuts for condensor users (g1 on my condensor= about g4 on my colour head...)
Now I know why people like pushing TriX over Neopan too, esp when over 800. Neopan quickly keeps building highlight density with development time, whereas TriX is a lower contrast film which picks up some shadow density without going nuts in the highlights. Seems that I could add another 50% to my already long TriX times and it would still be a cinch to print. This is a seriously tolerant film, which up until now I have only used in a fairly conventional way.

