Moss1310
Newbie
Hi. New to developing film and have a question. What do different levels of agitation do to the final result? I.e gentle vs. more vigorous... Does it matter by the film and developer used? Thanks for your help.
Agitation controls contrast, for the most part, and time increases density, for the most part.
Dear Terry,Good posts above, but in case the OP's real question is how he should agitate:
Agitate gently but thoroughly -- nice slow inversions if you're using an inversion tank, twisting a bit as you invert. Too vigorous agitation can exacerbate problems with air bubbles, and can cause surge marks around sprocket holes. Too little agitation can result in underdevelopment. Most developers/films call for 10 secs. of agitation at the beginning and 5 secs. each additional minute, though this can vary.
What is important is consistency
Sorry: didn't mean to come across as combative. Though as I say, I'd double your recommendations (and so would Ilford, as far as I recall). My recommendation is one end of 'normal'; yours, the other. Either way, the effects are minor. Consistency is always the key.I'm by no means arguing with continuous agitation, Roger -- I was only mentioning the type of agitation most newbies like the OP are most likely to use with a hand processing tank. Of course there are other schemes and methods.
Dunno. Tried it with scrap film and it's persuasive... But I do the bang in the middle of (or early in) the 30 seconds initial inversions and swirls.I'm not sold on the idea that banging the tank on the worktop dissipates bubbles. I generally go for an inversion and a swirl.
Dear Randy,I have followed the Massive Dev Chart app, and carry out 1 minute agitation with twirl stick, followed by 10 sec every minute.
However, I have definitely been over-agitating, especially when pushing film. I have maintained the 1 minute initial, but now do 10 sec every other minute during long development times (like 10 minutes).
I seem to be alone in doing a full minute initial agitation, but I am also alone in using the stick as opposed to inversions.
Randy
Bubbles will not not normally form or stick on wet emulsion, only as the film is first wetted, hence the 'bang on the table' to lose bubbles after filling the tank.
Cheers,
R.
My suspicion is that if anything, pre-wetting will increase the problem, not reduce it. Why, after all, should plain water be any less bubbly than developer? On the other hand, I suppose that a good shake and drain should wet the film evenly. In other words, I just don't know the answer.Roger,
I've been having issues with bubbles leaving circular development marks on the last half dozen negs of each roll. I've been banging the tank on the table more and more aggressively (at the end of each cycle of inversions, including the first 30 seconds) but the problem still persists. I'm guessing I need to do as you suggest, and bang the tank soon after being filled, rather than waiting to the end of the 30 seconds of inversions. However, is there any sense in pre-wetting the film before adding the developer, to prevent these initial bubbles from sticking?
Highlight: very true, but froth-bubbles shouldn't stick to wet film, and unless they're stuck to the film, they'll rise pretty fast anyway.Air bubbles form when the developer froths. Inversion agitation causes the developer to froth. Swirling, either with the Paterson 'stick' or a gentle rotation of the tank will not cause air bubbles. But, swirling alone will not evenly distribute the developer or keep it mixed in some cases, so inversion is still required.
Banging the tank relies on the bubbles breaking free and going 'up'. But you can't guarantee that, especially if you have more than one reel in the tank, so how many times do you need to bang it to get the bubbles up from bottom to top? Swirling causes the bubbles to find a way out of the liquid over a slightly longer cycle, as the liquid rotates the bubbles rise to each level and then out into the atmosphere within the tank.
So the ideal is to invert (to keep fresh developer on the film and fully mixed) and swirl at the end to allow the bubbles to find a way up and out.