The Paterson Aculux says processing time of 16 mins for Tmax 3200.
I have exposed this film at 1600 - do I reduce the processing time?
Thanks,
Matt
I have exposed this film at 1600 - do I reduce the processing time?
Thanks,
Matt
Yes, of course. I had a champagne-induced brain cramp there before I edited... Sorry.Kevin Caulfield said:Wouldn't exposing it at 1600 be overexposing it? You would be giving it twice the exposure that you would for 3200?

I only said ABOUT 12 minutes, but if the negs are sparkling and sharp then, well done. 
Kevin Caulfield said:Phew, I'm glad my suggestion worked!I only said ABOUT 12 minutes, but if the negs are sparkling and sharp then, well done.
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- you are waaaay too modest!KODAK PROFESSIONAL T-MAX P3200 Film is specially designed to be used as a multi-speed film. The speed you use depends on your application; make tests to determine the appropriate speed.
The nominal speed is EI 1000 when the film is processed in KODAK PROFESSIONAL T-MAX Developer or KODAK PROFESSIONAL T-MAX RS Developer and Replenisher, or EI 800 when it is processed in other Kodak black-and-white developers. It was determined in a manner published in ISO standards. For ease in calculating exposure and for consistency with the commonly used scale of film-speed numbers, the nominal speed has been rounded to EI 800.
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