common uses for dilution A
I guess I would be!Somehow Juan, I think you would be traumatized if you saw what newspaper photographers would do to their films.
That's great news to me!I've often used it at 1+31 for pushing HP5+, and agree with Covington that it's an area where HC-110 really shines. Would also work great in the same context with Tri-X.
I don't understand what you're talking about.So 3 different films at 3 different ISOs per film developed at 8 different dilutions per film per ISO for let's say 3 different times per film per ISO per dilution, so we are talking a couple of hundred rolls plus a couple of containers of developer. I hope when it is all said and done you will share the results. It will be interesting to see what you conclude. Will you be using a densitometer and plotting characteristic curves for each combination or are you just going to eyeball it?
I thought you were interested in determining what dilution of HC110 would be best for developing HP5+, Tri-X, and TMY at ISO 640, ISO 800, and ISO 1000 for direct sunlight scenes.I don't understand what you're talking about.
Not possible... Only EI200 or very close to it is fine for sunny scenes.I thought you were interested in determining what dilution of HC110 would be best for developing HP5+, Tri-X, and TMY at ISO 640, ISO 800, and ISO 1000 for direct sunlight scenes.
Not possible... Only EI200 or very close to it is fine for sunny scenes.
The biggest reason to use the different dilutions is to vary the relative amount of sulfite.
Thank you, Vaughn, I'll check it.My requirements are for negatives of relatively high contrast, and within a small range of contrast for specific alternative processes (using sheet film). My use of HC-110 included changing dilutions to reach my goals. One factor was length of development -- I wanted to keep the development times reasonable to save time and to prevent any build-up of base fog. I went from there to using Ilford PQ Universal Developer, going from paper strength (1:9) to film strength (1:19) as needed. Instead of dividing exposure into clear/overcast, I used the scenes' brightness range to determine development. Again, I am going for high contrast range negatives which made the stronger developer dilutions advanteous.
But the proof will be in the printing. There has been a recent discussion about using a divided pyro developer to moderate contrast that was very interesting...paticularially for those rolls that would have both cloudy and sunlit scenes on the same roll.
Six questions and you can't answer... You're out of place.Why impossible? How did you determine EI200 for sunny scenes if you have never used the developer? Is that for HP5, TMY, and Tri-X? How did you select what dilution would be best? Why do you think different EIs would be best for sunny scenes and soft light scenes? Why do you think different dilutions would be best for sunny scenes and soft light scenes?
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