Lenspeeper (et. al.): Great equipment. I've been loving the B's processor for a few months now, and find with consistent effort to tweak the application, it's giving me what I'm after.
Yesterday I shot 2 rolls of Delta 100 and then processed them in D23 Stock. D23 isn't exactly my go-to objective, but it was easy and lying around and a quick way to check my intended tweak in agitation (which was the purpose of the shots.... so I could run the test... and yeah, that's kind of backwards letting development drive the camera work? Sure, but it happens). My approach is now tweaked from using hand agitation simply at the beginning of the developer step to using it 100% for the developer step as follows:
1) Pre-wet: 2 baths. 1 minute each. The first I hand agitated to help remove whatever's on the film. Soft agitation a la Steve Schaub's video (pacing 2 smoothies in 5 seconds):
Standard (Manual) Agitation
2) Developer - Pour in, Start clock, 30-seconds of CONSTANT (Gentle) Manual Agitation per technique in video link above. On EACH minute mark thereafter until done, 10 seconds (4 inversions) of the same.
3) Everything that follows rides the B's processor for agitation AFTER receiving 4 (Gentle) Manual Agitations: Post Developer Rinse, Stop, Rinse, Fix, Rinse, Hypoclear, Rinse X 6, and Wetting Agent before pulling out of the tank, adding a gentle Kimiwipe wipedown and hanging to dry.
FWIW, I found the wobbly wheels didn't work all the well. And now given that I'm working the DEVELOPER step with hand agitation, they're kind of a moot point. Every step is ON the B's processor is run on the "3" (high speed) setting rather than the "1" - intermittent, or "2" intermediate. Great thing is that this is a pretty rugged piece of equipment. FWIW, I've used the extra thick rubberbands and ESPECIALLY the bracelet rubber bands you can find on Amazon to give a very nice, stable channel for the driving wheels to ride in. That was a problem for me initially, but that seemed a good cure. Benoit was working on an insulated tank for color as a pilot project, but that's probably still a few months out.... and may of course remain on the drawing board.
Benoit (the B of B's processors) prefers manual DEVELOPER inversions, and now I see what he means. Done GENTLY - and I think this is something as a former beginner, Rotary Processing gets you in the ballpark of the right speed, MANUAL inversion has tremendously reduced my grain and defects in the sky that need "removal" in Silverfast HDR. Much as I'd preferred 100% rotary processing, FROM NOW ON I'm going to use it ONLY on the processing steps that do not use DEVELOPER. The fact is the PIA of r
emoving defects after a scan takes a lot longer than the collective time involved in hand agitation for DEVELOPER, and it's just easier. The grains bugaboos also bring out any irregularity in the film, and these are the sort I'm just not seeing in the 2 rolls from yesterday.
Key take-a-way is that this analog process has its fun parts and the not-so-fun. Removing scan defects is kind of the lowest of the low, the worst of the worst IMHO and leaves me wondering, "Why don't I just chuck it all, buy a Monochrome Pentax K3 or whatever and escape this?" or maybe go to a wet darkroom... if only I had the space or a local one (nearest is an hour of mean highway driving away). The problem with Digital B&W from a non-monochrome digital camera is that to my eye, it's the digital "fill-in" from the filter that kind of counteracts the "sharpness" with a smoothness that just looks too much like chocolate pudding. Much as I'm a slacker who LOVES chocolate pudding, it goes in my mouth - NOT on my eyeballs.
So with the grain addressed much more to my liking, now we can get back to the accutance and tonality issues using PC-512, XT3 and/or the Pyrocat HD ordered yesterday. That's a sweet step forward for me.