I already tried rebleaching and refixing but without success. In the negatives its really difficult to see it, its almost imperceptible, thats why I didn't post photo and posted the scan. Ill show you two adjacent frames!Hm, this doesn't ring a bell. It's a rather subtle defect, but having looked at it for a bit, I can at least see what you mean.
View attachment 405868
View attachment 405867
On that first frame, I need to boost contrast very far to be able to see it at all. At that point, I'm also starting to see a very minor unevenness in development resulting from the rotation agitation (vertical dark 'flames' a bit like aurora running into the frame from the top).
What's interesting is that there's some kind of circular motion to the defect. Do you have examples of two adjacent frames on the same roll that show the defect? This might contain some clues. Also, the second image (of the sunset) suggests that the problem may be some kind of rogue density formation as it also appears to occur in the unexposed foreground of this image. Can you see the same striations on the unexposed parts of the leader and trailer of the film? You may need to scan those and boost contrast a lot to see what's going on.
One diagnostic you could try is to re-bleach and re-fix an affected strip of negatives and then see if the problem goes away.
Are we talking about motion picture or ECN-2 film in still lengths? Processing in C-41 sounds like latter.
Thanks for posting the adjacent frames. I've put them side by side similar to how I expect them to be on the film strip (you can verify):
View attachment 405898
Looking at the patterns, my money is on subtle surge marks caused during the brief moments of filling the tank with developer.
One thing you could try is to skip the remjet removal bath. Instead, perform that at the end of the process. There will be some fouling of the developer; there are a few ways to deal with this (including just accepting it). I'd also do separate experiments with and without a plain water pre-rinse.
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