DREW WILEY
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- Jul 14, 2011
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Maybe Dektol cures Covid. It seems to be the universal elixir. Anyone try it yet? Maybe Fred Picker sold it as "Zone VI Geritol".
I feel sorry for anyone who takes this advice literally! But then injecting bleach will cure a person of COVID, I hear....
For the sake of argument, let's mention that Dektol/D-72 was a "universal" developer that was meant to be used with both films and papers. Of course, it was mostly recommended for sheet film because of graininess, but it worked and Kodak gave times for it.
Not sure if it's still a good choice on modern films and smaller sizes, though.
Here's an excerpt from the 1946 Reference Handbook.
View attachment 379802
I think you can do much better nowadays
That's exactly what I said.
The Jobo Alpha was designed for rotary processing. Can it be used for inversion developing?If you want to exploit the potentail fully I can recommend SPUR HRX, JOBO Alpha.
Best regards,
Henning
it's safe to assume he was asking for results people had in their real world experience.
The Jobo Alpha was designed for rotary processing. Can it be used for inversion developing?
It's also safe to assume that he got all possible meaningful responses within 12 comments.
I used to shoot a lot of this film, but over time I became unhappy with the tones and contrast I got with it. However, the best negs I got were with well-diluted Rodinal, 1+50 or more. The film has fine grain and isn't much of an issue with any developer, but Rodinal strips away the purple color (won't hurt anything, but I find it unappealing) and gives better contrast with this film than others I've tried.
I resort to Perceptol 1:3 to increase the edge acutance of TMX100 by giving it just enough extra grain growth time. At 1:3, Perceptol behaves much differently than at the normal 1:1. Conventional development, whether in a common developer like 76 or a specialized pyro developer, will not do this. That's fine is you want a less crisp look, like for smooth complexion portraiture. TMX still holds tremendous detail. But for landscape and architectural subjects, I prefer a crisper edge rendition.
I use TMX for both general photography (in formats all the way from 4X5 to 8x10) and technical lab applications (like masking, color separations, and internegs etc). It's comfortable with many different developers; but I still need to select from among those in terms of specific application. I do have special low contrast dev tweaks for masking. But I avoid as much as possible any kind of heavy compensating or minus development in shooting situations; I'd rather add a supplemental contrast control mask than scrunch the microtonal life and sparkle out of an image via heavy-handed minus development.
How much chemical should I use?
No one else has plunked for Tmax 100 in Caffenol
Keith, yes, it can be used also for classic inversion developing. Technically no problem at all. You will also get excellent results with better detail rendition compared to HC-110, D-76, XTOL etc.
But it is not so economical, as you need much less developer in rotary processing. And the market price is based on the rotary application for which is was designed for.
Best regards,
Henning
Thank you Henning.
The Spur Omega X developer that you mentioned is also of interest. Perhaps that would be more economical than the Jobo Alpha developer for inversion agitation.
Thanks. I will look forward to reading your results. I have heard good things about the Jobo Alpha developer.Price wise, Jobo Alpha still comes out on top, even on inversion tanks:
Here in Germany it's about 19EUR for 6 litres of working solution, which is about 12-20 120/135 films in my paterson tanks. So roughly speaking 1.5 to 2 EUR per roll.
Spur Omega X is 35 EUR, total working solution depends on the film, but TMX will give 4 litres (which is about in the middle of the range). So that's 8-13 films, or roughly 2.70 to 4.40 EUR per roll.
I just ordered some Spur Omega X and will try to test it with Jobo Alpha, and of course with trusty XTOL as a reference.
Price wise, Jobo Alpha still comes out on top, even on inversion tanks:
Here in Germany it's about 19EUR for 6 litres of working solution, which is about 12-20 120/135 films in my paterson tanks. So roughly speaking 1.5 to 2 EUR per roll.
Spur Omega X is 35 EUR, total working solution depends on the film, but TMX will give 4 litres (which is about in the middle of the range). So that's 8-13 films, or roughly 2.70 to 4.40 EUR per roll.
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