markaudacity
Member
[Sorry for the ugly thread title, trying to cram in all the keywords that didn't help me find anyone with this same problem!]
Background: I've been experimenting with split-rating a single roll, IE, outdoor shots rated at 400, indoor at 1600. I carry a camera everywhere but take about a week to burn a full roll, so I can't choose a single ISO. It works pretty well with stand processing, but I'm getting bromide drag, and I can only do one roll in a tank, which is tedious.
I just ran a single roll of 35mm Tri-X exposed this way through the Jobo in DD-X 1+4, per dev chart. I subtracted 15% from the indicated development time, and the negatives came out...less than stellar.
First thing, high base fog everywhere. I don't have a densitometer, but it's significant, certainly enough to affect printing. The film base also appears less purple than I'm used to (with Rodinal/D-76), and no dye came out in the wash or the hypo clear that I saw.
The first four frames were exposed at 400, in bright outdoor sun. Those look great.
The rest are mostly indoors, exposed at 1600, and they're noticeably underdeveloped. Definitely printable, but I would like to see some more shadow density above base, they're going to print pretty dark.
The negs are drying right now, so I don't have a contact print to look at yet.
What should my next course of action be? If it weren't for the base fog, I would say they just needed a bit more development, but I associate high base fog on fresh, recently exposed, thermally-unabused film with straight overdevelopment.
I'm fine with the 400 frames being overdeveloped a bit as long as the 1600 frames are developed enough to print from, but if I add more development time, I think the fog is going to get unmanageable.
Summary of factors:
Background: I've been experimenting with split-rating a single roll, IE, outdoor shots rated at 400, indoor at 1600. I carry a camera everywhere but take about a week to burn a full roll, so I can't choose a single ISO. It works pretty well with stand processing, but I'm getting bromide drag, and I can only do one roll in a tank, which is tedious.
I just ran a single roll of 35mm Tri-X exposed this way through the Jobo in DD-X 1+4, per dev chart. I subtracted 15% from the indicated development time, and the negatives came out...less than stellar.
First thing, high base fog everywhere. I don't have a densitometer, but it's significant, certainly enough to affect printing. The film base also appears less purple than I'm used to (with Rodinal/D-76), and no dye came out in the wash or the hypo clear that I saw.
The first four frames were exposed at 400, in bright outdoor sun. Those look great.
The rest are mostly indoors, exposed at 1600, and they're noticeably underdeveloped. Definitely printable, but I would like to see some more shadow density above base, they're going to print pretty dark.
The negs are drying right now, so I don't have a contact print to look at yet.
What should my next course of action be? If it weren't for the base fog, I would say they just needed a bit more development, but I associate high base fog on fresh, recently exposed, thermally-unabused film with straight overdevelopment.
I'm fine with the 400 frames being overdeveloped a bit as long as the 1600 frames are developed enough to print from, but if I add more development time, I think the fog is going to get unmanageable.
Summary of factors:
- Tri-X 400
- 35mm
- exposed at 400 and 1600 on different frames
- rotary processed in single-roll Jobo tank
- DD-X 1+4
- 20C dev temp
- 11m54s (indicated 14m -15%)
- stop indicating good
- fix tested with Hypo-Check immediately before use