But I learned that the first generation of Patterson tanks could only be used with swizzle stick, not inversion.
Daylight tanks in general started just with twisting the reel, being only light- not water-tight.
But I learned that the first generation of Patterson tanks could only be used with swizzle stick, not inversion.
So I suspect that the reason Patterson recommend swizzle at first is because it is fast.
if Paterson would give us an explanation for a twiddle cycle initially! It can only be assumed they did formal testing to come to that conclusion. Sure would be nice to know why.
One of the features of the original Paterson tanks - introduced more than 70 years ago - was that they were designed:
"to allow the whole spiral with its immersed film to be lifted a few millimetres, by pulling upwards on the funnel, and subsequently lowered again...
But that the tank got water of seemingly same colour does not necessarily mean that that good exchange at the film surface takes place. Here you could get mislead by your set-up of the experiment.
Another myth: banging the tank against the table. When I started developing film in 1969 I thought I'd soon induce a fatigue crack in my tank by doing so, so I have never done the banging bit, and I have have never seen an area of the film underdeveloped because of bubbles sticking to the film.
I also thought that plastic tanks are so soft that the impact would never reach the film - maybe in a steel tank.
Anybody with actual experience?
I have a box of unused twizzle sticks.
The discussion of agitation techniques can dissolve marriages and is better left alone!
That said and since my wife is not looking,,,
With a Paterson Tank.
30 seconds agitation then one only vigorous flip flop every minute; never had better results.
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