What about chromogenics? Anything which can be shot at iso 800 and developed normally at labs?
Is there any reason why there's no iso800 B&W 35mm film? There's iso 100, 400, 1600 and 3200 film but no iso 800 B&W but there's iso 800 color 35mm film :confused:
Is there any reason why there's no iso800 B&W 35mm film?
TMZ and Delta 3200 are really around ISO 800.
Also test 400TX. Excellent for interiors @ iso800
I suppose since "fast" mono films hold up so well upped just one stop, and you can easily drop the 1600s to 800, there's never been a market for iso800.
HP5 Plus is ISO 650 in speed increasing developers such as Microphen and as Robert says Fuji's 1600 is 800 in DD-X or the like. TMZ is ISO 800-1000 in most developerts and Delta 3200 is ISO 1000-1200 in most developers.
Cheers,
R.
Sorry to be the grumpy old man, but 400 TX is ISO 400 andonly ISO 400. Everything else is EI, shadow detals or not.
j-fr
www.j-fr.dk
I thought that Microphen and DD-X were both speed increasing developers and have similar formulations. Not so?
TMZ and Delta 3200 are really around ISO 800.
and Kodak's words on TMZ:
"The nominal speed is EI 1000 when the film is processed in KODAK PROFESSIONAL T-MAX Developer or KODAK PROFESSIONAL T-MAX RS Developer and Replenisher, or EI 800 when it is processed in other Kodak black-and-white developers. It was determined in a manner published in ISO standards."
According to Roger Hicks Delta 3200 is more like 1200 and performs best between 1200-2000 in something like DD-X. I tend to agree with this assessment.
If I recall correctly, Fomapan T800 was discontinued due to a lawsuit from Kodak alleging violation of its T-grain patent. At the time, it was quite popular and there definitely would have been a market for it if they'd been given the chance.
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