Rollei Superpan 200 and Ilford Perceptol

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psmithp

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Has anybody tried this combination? The Massive Development Chart does not suggest any development times. I would like the quality of FP4 but a bit more sensitivity as 50 ASA is on the low side if you shoot indoors with natural light.
 

Anon Ymous

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Truth be told, I have never used this film, but the fact is that the true ISO speed of this film isn't 200. With a reasonably good developer you can expect about 100-125 ISO, so you're not gaining anything vs FP4 plus. With Perceptol, you can expect some speed loss, a stop or thereabouts.
 

Paul Howell

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Good question, as an aero recon film have no idea how it would work with a fine grain developer like Perceptol, when in the US Air Force in the 70s we always used an accuance type developer for recon film to maximize fine detail. I shot one roll of Rollie 200, I had used ISO 200, but should have shot at 100 for better shadow details, if as noted by Anon Ymous you will lose a stop with Perceptol (Kodak Microdal X), I would shot at 50 and develop for 10 mint stock. Hopefully someone will have real world experience.
 

pentaxuser

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The loss of a stop with Perceptol is not a certainty. If you look at the Ilford info on Perceptol it varies with the film and dilution

pentaxuser
 

albireo

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Has anybody tried this combination? The Massive Development Chart does not suggest any development times. I would like the quality of FP4 but a bit more sensitivity as 50 ASA

did you mean PanF there?
 

Ivo Stunga

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@albireo hints at FP4 Plus being 125 film whereas you're quoting 50.

So it's either different film, or you're engaging in Pulling, or do you want a slower film with similar properties to FP4?
 
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psmithp

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@albireo hints at FP4 Plus being 125 film whereas you're quoting 50.

So it's either different film, or you're engaging in Pulling, or do you want a slower film with similar properties to FP4?

Ilford recommends 50 ASA for FP4 in Perceptol and I assume that Superpan will behave similarly - but be a bit faster. From the other replies I gather that it may not be the case.
 

albireo

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Is Rollei Superpan as red sensitive as Rollei Retro 400s? If it is, it might not be a good replacement for Ilford FP4+, regardless of ISO speed rating, as FP4+ has a pretty standard panchromatic response.

Something to keep in mind if you take pictures of pale white people. The way highly red-sensitive film (eg Rollei Retro 400s, Fomapan 400, Fuji Acros) renders pale complexion is not to everyone's liking.
 
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psmithp

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Is Rollei Superpan as red sensitive as Rollei Retro 400s? If it is, it might not be a good replacement for Ilford FP4+, regardless of sensitiviity, as FP4+ has a pretty standard panchromatic response.

Something to keep in mind if you take pictures of pale white people. The way highly red-sensitive film (eg Rollei Retro 400s, Fomapan 400, Fuji Acros) renders pale complexion is not to everyone's liking.

Thanks for the tip. And I agree - you can create some very ghostly faces digitally when converting from colour to b&w simulating a red filter.
 
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psmithp

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Has anybody tried this combination? The Massive Development Chart does not suggest any development times. I would like the quality of FP4 but a bit more sensitivity as 50 ASA is on the low side if you shoot indoors with natural light.

I wrote to Rollei and they replied as follows:

Superpan 200 in Perceptol: 200 ISO: 1+1, 14’, 1’ pre-washing, 20°C.

When I have tried it, I'll post my opinion. Thanks to all for their contributions
 

JPD

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If skin tones turn out to be too pale you can use a blue filter to correct for that.

For landscapes the extended red sensitivity means that you don't need a yellow or orange filter to darken the sky.
 

Alan Johnson

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Superpan 200 is believed repackaged Aviphot 200.

 

albireo

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For landscapes the extended red sensitivity means that you don't need a yellow or orange filter to darken the sky.

Exactly. And that is why Fomapan 400 and Rollei Retro 400s (to name two I know well) are spectacular choices for landscape/urban/architectural photography. It's basically like having a free orange filter on at all times, minus the 2 stop loss.
 
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Mark J

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Superpan emulsion is a recon film. Recon films almost always have extended red sensitivity or IR sensitivity, to cut through haze. Technical Pan was another example that made it into the mainstream. Superpan is probably the same emulsion as Rollei IR and Aviphot 200. It has sensitivity up to 760 or 770nm, just check the datasheet. I have been using it through the Spring this year ( I shot about 6 rolls ) as an IR film , using a Hoya R72. It works very well in that mode.
 

Ivo Stunga

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Ilford recommends 50 ASA for FP4 in Perceptol and I assume that Superpan will behave similarly - but be a bit faster. From the other replies I gather that it may not be the case.

Didn't know/haven't stubbled upon that, my bad if that's the case.

But as stated above by members: Superpan won't be near a direct replacement as it renders the scene differently/is sensitive to light differently than FP4+

I too use it as IR film - interchangeably with Adox HR-50/Scala 50, Rollei RPX 25, Retro 80S, Retro 400S, and Infrared 400. And Astrum/Tasma FN64, Foto 100 and 200 too, which could be another Aviphot incarnation, coming on similarly looking, feeling and smelling film than Rollei's repackaging of Aviphot Pan 80 and Pan 200

IR slides look lovely
 

koraks

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Didn't know/haven't stubbled upon that, my bad if that's the case.

They give a development time for FP4+ EI 50 in Perceptol in the Perceptol datasheet. But at the same time they also provide times for higher EI's. I haven't been able to locate anything from Ilford that the 'real' speed of the film would be limited to 50. I doubt they'd say something like this.
 

Slixtiesix

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If you like the FP4+ and Perceptol combination (which I do as well), why not try HP5+ with Perceptol? It will give you a useable speed around 250 ISO.
I used that with great results.
 
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