fuzk
Established
Hi all!
I'm asking on behalf of a friend who wants to try pulling the film. He is using HC-110 dilution B and he can't seem to find any developing timings for it. I tried to find on the internet but timings seem to vary. Help?
Thanks in advance!
Best,
Jy
I'm asking on behalf of a friend who wants to try pulling the film. He is using HC-110 dilution B and he can't seem to find any developing timings for it. I tried to find on the internet but timings seem to vary. Help?
Thanks in advance!
Best,
Jy
Mablo
Well-known
I'd say 8min is a good starting point.
I use quite a lot of R-R 400 (rebranded APX400) at ASA 200-250. Usually I soup it in Rodinal 1+50 for 10min. Not my favorite film - but I still have one whole bulk roll of it left so I better not complain.
I use quite a lot of R-R 400 (rebranded APX400) at ASA 200-250. Usually I soup it in Rodinal 1+50 for 10min. Not my favorite film - but I still have one whole bulk roll of it left so I better not complain.
fuzk
Established
Thanks Mablo for the very quick reply.
How different is Rodinal from HC-110? I'm afraid we can't get (or my friend doesn't have) Rodinal. Would the timings vary greatly?
Best,
Jy
How different is Rodinal from HC-110? I'm afraid we can't get (or my friend doesn't have) Rodinal. Would the timings vary greatly?
Best,
Jy
Mablo
Well-known
Sorry, I reread my very unclear development notes. The starting point is definitely not 8min but more like 6min for HC-110, dilution B. If still in doubt (you better be!) check with a forum member named RobertV. He is an expert of all things concerning Rollei films and their development.
Rodinal is quite different from HC-110 and dilutions are different so it is not unusual that dev times change quite a lot.
Rodinal is quite different from HC-110 and dilutions are different so it is not unusual that dev times change quite a lot.
fuzk
Established
Mablo,
If being in doubt means I'm on the right track, you can definitely say I am!
I'll pm RobertV and see what he says. Thanks Mablo!
If being in doubt means I'm on the right track, you can definitely say I am!
I'll pm RobertV and see what he says. Thanks Mablo!
Pherdinand
the snow must go on
i used recently apx400 at 250, should be the same. 11 mins and one inversion per minute worked best for me (20deg C) in rodinal 1+50. (I scan the film.)
marduk
Well-known
See also mine thread: http://www.flickr.com/groups/ishootfilm/discuss/72157622345182580/
fuzk
Established
Pherdinand and Marduk,
Thanks for the very useful information. I'll be sure to pass it on to my friend and see what he makes out of it.
Thanks for the very useful information. I'll be sure to pass it on to my friend and see what he makes out of it.
titrisol
Bottom Feeder
Well a normal time in dil B is about 6 minutes
so your friend would have to be looking at ~5 minutes BUT I would go closer to the 6 minutes anyway.
If he has a few rolls I think it is better to sacrifice one and determine the EI of the film.
- Set the development (6 min n HC110 B)
- Find a controlled scene (I used the mantel or a bookcase) with a wide range of tones
- Shoot -2,-1,0,+1,+2 or in half stops then a blank then repeat
- Develop a snippet of the film (by having hte seuqence repeated youĺl be sure to have at least one in your snippet)
- Evaluate which speed fits best the printing/scanning and then rate the film by this.
so your friend would have to be looking at ~5 minutes BUT I would go closer to the 6 minutes anyway.
If he has a few rolls I think it is better to sacrifice one and determine the EI of the film.
- Set the development (6 min n HC110 B)
- Find a controlled scene (I used the mantel or a bookcase) with a wide range of tones
- Shoot -2,-1,0,+1,+2 or in half stops then a blank then repeat
- Develop a snippet of the film (by having hte seuqence repeated youĺl be sure to have at least one in your snippet)
- Evaluate which speed fits best the printing/scanning and then rate the film by this.
Hi all!
I'm asking on behalf of a friend who wants to try pulling the film. He is using HC-110 dilution B and he can't seem to find any developing timings for it. I tried to find on the internet but timings seem to vary. Help?
Thanks in advance!
Best,
Jy
Roger Hicks
Veteran
It's a good question whether this is really a pull at all. Too much depends on metering technique and subject matter. With broad-area metering and a long subject brightness range, rating at 200 might give an identical exposure to metering shadows with a spot meter at 400.
Broadly, one stop overexposure (with identical development) will increase grain slightly and decrease sharpness slightly. Cutting developmemt will then reduce contrast and highlight desity. With a low-quality scanner, high density in the highlights may cause them to 'blow' to a featureless white. Wet printing, or with a good scanner, it shouldn't.
Cheers,
R.
Broadly, one stop overexposure (with identical development) will increase grain slightly and decrease sharpness slightly. Cutting developmemt will then reduce contrast and highlight desity. With a low-quality scanner, high density in the highlights may cause them to 'blow' to a featureless white. Wet printing, or with a good scanner, it shouldn't.
Cheers,
R.
fuzk
Established
Titrisol and Roger,
Thank you both for the very good advice. I greatly appreciate it.
Best,
Jy
Thank you both for the very good advice. I greatly appreciate it.
Best,
Jy
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