twelvetone12
Member
As the title says. Rant and I'm still not sure what is the lesson to learn here is.
I got in BW photography circa 10 years ago. After some very disappointing results I gave up and concentrated on my other passion: 8mm films. Until 2014, when I finished my last roll of Ektachrome and developing Fomapan become too expensive. Since I always liked the BW results with my films, I decided it was time to finally try to master BW photography. So I dug out my old darkroom equipment and started to shoot. But is has not been an easy path in these three years, and I often found myself wrestling with contrast, blocked higlhligts, and wondering why manufacturers give times that result in overdeveloped film, which I often end up cutting down.
Cue to a couple weeks ago. I was in my shared darkroom preparing for some C41 processing. We have a JOBO CPA2 with a three digit serial number and an accompanying thermometer that still says "made in Wester Germany" on it. I never trusted this thermometer too much as it is old and the scale is all curly and washed away. After a previous run of disappointing E6 I decided to bring my trustworthy thermometer from home. Which I brought new and was quite expensive. And the difference between the two was big! Ha! Gotcha! The old jobo one surely was very off. Or not?
The negatives came out dense. Dense and incredibly contrasty, with colors quite off. This is when I started to suspect something. I got a nice digital precision thermometer, and lo and behold, my old one is 3.5 degrees off. For the last ten years - and in particular the last 3 - I have been baking my films at 23.5° thinking it was 20°. Without any compensation. This explains why I always ended up cutting dev times to tame contrast and exploding highlights.
In the last three years I precisely measured with this thermometer the temperature of the developer for almost 150 rolls of film. That thermometer is of a known brand and made explicitly for photographic use. I imagined it would have some tolerance, but almost 4 degrees? I have to retest al my methods again from scratch.
I'm not sure what the moral here is.
I got in BW photography circa 10 years ago. After some very disappointing results I gave up and concentrated on my other passion: 8mm films. Until 2014, when I finished my last roll of Ektachrome and developing Fomapan become too expensive. Since I always liked the BW results with my films, I decided it was time to finally try to master BW photography. So I dug out my old darkroom equipment and started to shoot. But is has not been an easy path in these three years, and I often found myself wrestling with contrast, blocked higlhligts, and wondering why manufacturers give times that result in overdeveloped film, which I often end up cutting down.
Cue to a couple weeks ago. I was in my shared darkroom preparing for some C41 processing. We have a JOBO CPA2 with a three digit serial number and an accompanying thermometer that still says "made in Wester Germany" on it. I never trusted this thermometer too much as it is old and the scale is all curly and washed away. After a previous run of disappointing E6 I decided to bring my trustworthy thermometer from home. Which I brought new and was quite expensive. And the difference between the two was big! Ha! Gotcha! The old jobo one surely was very off. Or not?
The negatives came out dense. Dense and incredibly contrasty, with colors quite off. This is when I started to suspect something. I got a nice digital precision thermometer, and lo and behold, my old one is 3.5 degrees off. For the last ten years - and in particular the last 3 - I have been baking my films at 23.5° thinking it was 20°. Without any compensation. This explains why I always ended up cutting dev times to tame contrast and exploding highlights.
In the last three years I precisely measured with this thermometer the temperature of the developer for almost 150 rolls of film. That thermometer is of a known brand and made explicitly for photographic use. I imagined it would have some tolerance, but almost 4 degrees? I have to retest al my methods again from scratch.
I'm not sure what the moral here is.
I learned quite a valuable lesson. For some reason I was convinces thermometers are infallible devices - how dumb. I can't get my head over it, as in my engineering job I never blindly trust my equipment and I always cross check I'm getting meaningful readings. For some reason it never occurred to me with the thermometer!