Chris,
you should have told us that your are looking for chemistry for the Ilfolab 2150RC, that would have made things much easier from the beginning! Rollei/Macodirect sells a developer/fixer kit of 2x4 liters called "
Rollei Speed 2000 TL" which I think is intended as equivalent/direct replacement for the Ilford chemistry for the 2150RC. The price is 50 EUR, and my guess is, it's not gonna get any cheaper than that. Of course you could start experimenting with other/cheaper developers and fixers or even mix your own, which might work or not work, but IMO you would be better off by spending the money on the Rollei chemistry (knowing it WILL work) and spending your precious time to get your contact sheets finally printed! BTW, the processing temperature of the 2150RC according to the manual is 35C, not 40C.
John
Hi John,
First —about my stealthiness— sorry, but I didn't want to put it right out there that I was looking for a replacement of a chemical from a company which, as I said, I generally try to support .. I know a few of the folks at Ilford and I don't want to make enemies or look [too] hypocritical! However, Mike's reference to the very machine blew my cover! (and thanks, but I know about the correct temperature already, thats why I said "around" 100°F).
Thanks, also, for the recommendation to use Rollei Speed 2000TL, but it's the very
first stuff I tried! Maybe I'm stupid, but the results were disastrous due to my complete confusion due to the apparently different dilution requirements between Ilford's and Rollei's chemicals (in fact, Ilford doesn't even
give "dilution instructions" ...you just dump in all into the machine).
The Ilford machine is designed so that you pour in
3 liters of [specially formulated Ilford] chemistry and then the machine dilutes it to 14 liters of working solution, whereas the Rollei chemistry is sold in
4 liter bottles. I and the retired person who sold me the machine and was "training" me (she'd never heard of "Rollei" chemistry before and joked that "their camera business must have
really fallen off!") stood there scratching our heads.
Finally, we made the fatal error of deciding to dilute the Rollei stuff
before pouring in the 3 liters, and, of course, the contrast of the resulting prints were lower than my socks on a hot Sunday. That was last year. Presently, I understand that the dilution rates between the Ilford and Rollei chemicals are similar, but because of the packaging difference, you waste money and probably chemicals on the Rollei brand. Several months ago, I contacted Maco about this, essentially saying, "What the heck am I supposed to do with an extra liter of chemicals
each time I fill the machine? Sure, I could dilute it down for tray processing, but that is ridiculous... I bought the stuff for a machine!" (In fact, I have the impression that this developer and fixer is meant for any roller transport machine
other than the Ilford 2150RC). For this reason I've been reluctant to re-purchase the product. I spoke with Maco about this several months ago, but I haven't heard back from them. If you know more than they do (or can at least respond quicker!), I'm all ears, dear colleague!
SCOOP! I'm editing this post because I've just called Sebastian Junghans, a very helpful customer service rep at Maco. He says that (because of my constant bitching <my words, but surely his thoughts!), the manufacture will offer Rollei 2000TL chemistry in 3 liter bottles as of September/October. ... therefore, a big thank you to John, who dug up the ball and help get it rolling again. Now, to see if they'll hold their per/liter price at the same point (reading, Maco?!)