Paul Verizzo
Member
Honestly, where does Photo Warehouse come up with these names?
Anyway, if you don't know, they market a film allegedly since 1989 allegedly T-Grain. Rolls around $4, long rolls.....oops, never in stock....never mind. I've been mighty curious, since to the best of my knowledge only Kodak and Ilford make T-Grains.....maybe Acros was a designer grain, too.......and Ilford didn't come out with Delta after that alleged 1989 date by several years.
I placed an order for the Ultrafine Extreme.....honestly, where does Photo Warehouse come up with these names?...... 100 for a knock about and developer testing film. So I added 5 rolls of the, altogether now, Ultramax.
I use D-76 for a reference developer for new films, but in this case I went straight to my DK-50 diluted 1:1. Just call me impetuous. Per a solid bit of advice on another forum, I use T-Max 1:4 development times for that developer. Always right in the ballpark, like with the Extreme 100.
My first impression out of the tank was that it could have used another 15% more time. But on the scanner, close to perfect.
The film itself is nothing like the T-Max's. Not the base, it's thinner. Different leader color. No pink fixer stain. Only markings are numerical frame counters.
I was real disappointed in the grain, for allegedly being a T type. I went back and looked at my TMY scans and the difference is like a T-Max (of course), and a conventional grain film. Since I don't have any scans of TX of HP5+, I'm just making a jump of logic here.
I'll just use the Ultramax as a faux TX or similar.
I was going to provide scans, but somehow despite all the whirring and results showing, they didn't make it to the hard drive. Technology. What a love/hate relationship.
I guess if you want the real thing, you gotta buy the real thing.
UPDATE: I just did. Buy the real thing. 100' roll at Freestyle, $84. Adorama and B&H, $130. What the heck?
Anyway, if you don't know, they market a film allegedly since 1989 allegedly T-Grain. Rolls around $4, long rolls.....oops, never in stock....never mind. I've been mighty curious, since to the best of my knowledge only Kodak and Ilford make T-Grains.....maybe Acros was a designer grain, too.......and Ilford didn't come out with Delta after that alleged 1989 date by several years.
I placed an order for the Ultrafine Extreme.....honestly, where does Photo Warehouse come up with these names?...... 100 for a knock about and developer testing film. So I added 5 rolls of the, altogether now, Ultramax.
I use D-76 for a reference developer for new films, but in this case I went straight to my DK-50 diluted 1:1. Just call me impetuous. Per a solid bit of advice on another forum, I use T-Max 1:4 development times for that developer. Always right in the ballpark, like with the Extreme 100.
My first impression out of the tank was that it could have used another 15% more time. But on the scanner, close to perfect.
The film itself is nothing like the T-Max's. Not the base, it's thinner. Different leader color. No pink fixer stain. Only markings are numerical frame counters.
I was real disappointed in the grain, for allegedly being a T type. I went back and looked at my TMY scans and the difference is like a T-Max (of course), and a conventional grain film. Since I don't have any scans of TX of HP5+, I'm just making a jump of logic here.
I'll just use the Ultramax as a faux TX or similar.
I was going to provide scans, but somehow despite all the whirring and results showing, they didn't make it to the hard drive. Technology. What a love/hate relationship.
I guess if you want the real thing, you gotta buy the real thing.
UPDATE: I just did. Buy the real thing. 100' roll at Freestyle, $84. Adorama and B&H, $130. What the heck?
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