That is certainly an interesting result, not exactly sure what’s going on there. The base should be almost perfectly clear. And I have no idea what’s up with the fog patterns you are seeing.I tried developing a roll of this today with very poor results. I shot a roll of 120, 3 scenes each shot at EI of 6, 12, 25 and 50.
I developed this in TDLC-103, which is composed of:
1g Metol
5g Sodium Sulfite
10g Sodium Bicarbonate
Water to make 1000ml
I developed this roll for 10min at 68f, 30 sec initial agitation, 3 inversions every 2 minutes thereafter. (10 minutes is the recommended starting time for document, copy and microfilms)
First off, it turned my fixer yellow, which hopefully is some kind of dye and not this fairly fresh batch of rapid fixer sulfuring out because of this film. Neither the developer or water stop were tinted yellow.
View attachment 414512
Basically no development occurred, and I've used this developer formula on Kodak Plus-X Aerographic 2402 before, so I know it should work to some extent in this time range for a normal film.
Film base still has a yellow tint and strange patches of fogging. Banding that occurs every 7 inches or so and starts with a sharp line of high density that then fades to low density before repeating. Also spherical areas of low density along one edge.
Only the first image that was exposed at EI 6 was visible on the negative, albeit very faintly. None of the other images exposed at the same EI or otherwise are visible.
Next time I'll try something like T-Max Dev or D-23.
View attachment 414511View attachment 414510View attachment 414509View attachment 414508
with a light-yello filtwr theEI will most likely drop to EI6, but the high blue sensitivity and exaggerated contrast will be better controlled. I do this with Harman's direct-positivepapr with great success;willing to try in 120 in Rodinal or D76.
I have a large darkroom, which is a requirement for this. You absolutely cannot do this in a changing bag, and if you are making 120, you need a 3’ measuring thing.New to this forum so I missed this opportunity. I also saw this film on eBay and am considering purchasing it due to the price. Can I ask how you slit it down from 105mm to ~61.5mm?
I normally develop with Xtol (1+1 or 1+3). Any thoughts how that would work?
I have a large darkroom, which is a requirement for this. You absolutely cannot do this in a changing bag, and if you are making 120, you need a 3’ measuring thing.
Technically the film is orthochromatic, but I (and a friend) have found that it will get fogged if you put it under red light long enough, so I do not use it.
I cut the film with a 3D printed slitter, using a big 100 ft developing spiral loader that I have. First I trim to 70mm, then I trim to 61.5mm. You get a 35mm offcut and a minox strip.
I also have a 99mm slitter for making sheet film so I don’t have to cut it twice.
New test with this film with some better results.
Thus time I developed in D-23 1:1 dilution for 15 minutes at 68F. 60 second prewash. Agitation continuous for first 30 seconds, then 5 inversions every 3 minutes thereafter. Acid stop bath, rapid fixer 5 minutes, hypo clear and 10 minute wash.
View attachment 415116View attachment 415117
The good:
Base is much clearer and doesn't show any signs of the fogging from the previous roll. Since D-23 uses the same chemicals as TDLC-103 other than dilution and the lack of sodium bicarbonate, I'd theorize this film doesn't respond well to sodium bicarbonate for some reason.
Exposure testing was done with an EI of 6, 12, 25 and 50 for each scene. I used a handheld reflective meter for measurement. Both EI 6 and 12 and usable with 6 showing a bit more shadow detail. 25 might be useable but is identifiably underexposed in my opinion. 50 is unusable.
The weird:
Continues to tint my fixer yellow for some reason. Doesn't seem to affect the fixing capacity in any meaningful way though it is odd. Normally sensitization or anti-halation dyes wash out in alkaline solutions. Whatever is tinting my fixer doesn't wash out in the water prewash, alkaline developer or acidic fixer but does wash out in the fixer.
The bad:
Light leaks are visible on the edge of the film. Since I shot this in a camera which I have used previously for multiple rolls of much faster film, and the spacing of the light leaks do not align with the spacing of the frames, I'm not inclined to think it is an in camera light leak. I believe this film is on a polyester base, so it might be more susceptible to light piping.
As with the test exposure Thinkbrown showed in post #16 of this thread, visible speckles are apparent in each frame. This pattern does not show up on the unexposed portion of the film and is more visible in highlight areas than shadows, which leads me to speculate that this is some kind of loss of sensitivity rather than fogging.
Because the speckling is visible on all frames and consistent throughout the roll, it's pretty apparent this is endemic to the available rolls of this film, probably due to storage conditions or some such. As such, it pretty much rules this film out for me for anything other than experimenting or maybe checking cameras for light leaks, as every picture is going to have that speckling on it.
That looks like what I see sometimes when I leave a roll out too long in room light without foil wrapper. That is probably on me unless it was loaded in very bright light. Very sorry for that. They were wrapped in foil pretty quickly but if it wasn’t rolled tight enough I can see that happening.
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