The instructions for my Cinestill C-41 kit say to use 4 inversion cycles every 30 seconds. I would rather do rotary agitation because the cap leaks when it’s upside down. What would the rotary equivalent of 4 inversions be?
I don't think there is one as such. In C41 the dev time is 195 secs so that's about 24-25 inversions in total whereas a Jobo Processor must rotate a lot more in 195 secs. If you are using a rotary processor then just go with pre-set speed.If you are hand rolling then I'd just roll say 3 revolutions forward and 3 back to replicate a Jobo Processor machine, thus giving continuous rotation as per the Jobo.The instructions for my Cinestill C-41 kit say to use 4 inversion cycles every 30 seconds. I would rather do rotary agitation because the cap leaks when it’s upside down. What would the rotary equivalent of 4 inversions be?
So you are talking using the swizzle stick? You can swizzle the stick for 5 seconds every 30, or you can look at Kodak's instructions for the old tanks that you slid back and forth in a short arc on a table top. These both work fine. Until you get to full back and forth rotary agitation like a Jobo machine agitation usually doesn't show up much difference. With C41 if you are using short times 3'15" you want to agitate at least every 30 seconds. Just stay consistent with time and temp.The instructions for my Cinestill C-41 kit say to use 4 inversion cycles every 30 seconds. I would rather do rotary agitation because the cap leaks when it’s upside down. What would the rotary equivalent of 4 inversions be?
+1I have done both over a period of years and the Jobo processor wins every time with correctly processing and consistency.
some rotary processors indeed allow a switch in rotation direction but,I have only used (successfully) slow,constant rotation in one direction. the results were close to identical to inversion every60 seconds.The instructions for my Cinestill C-41 kit say to use 4 inversion cycles every 30 seconds. I would rather do rotary agitation because the cap leaks when it’s upside down. What would the rotary equivalent of 4 inversions be?
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