Any love for Plus-X?

One of my favorite B&W films. Just shot this a few weeks back. Plus-X in Xtol with a Rolleiflex 6006.

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Jim B.
 
Taking an Inventory in my Deepfreeze.

Taking an Inventory in my Deepfreeze.

Some unusual Plus-X films in my deepfreeze:

Eastman Motion Picture 35mm Plus-X 5231, in a 400 foot roll. Bought fresh from Kodak in NYC, sadly no longer available. I believe this is the original formulation of Plus-X, as it is rated at 80 EI in daylight, 64 EI in tungsten. Absolutely lovely in use in a Leica :) There is enough here to load up approx (80) 36 exposure film cartridges.

Two 100' rolls of 70mm Plus-X, which I use in my Hasselblad A70 backs. The old Plus-X, long expired (1981!) but probably still good. Still need to get around to testing it.

70mm Plus-X Aerographic Film 2402, not that old, in a 150' roll. Good for pictorial shooting in a Hasselblad A70 back. Nice film.

Finally a 500' roll of Plus-X Aerorecon Film 3404. This is a thin based film, designed for an aerial filmback. I can load about 250 exposures into a standard Kodak 70mm film cassette, and it works well in the Hasselblad A70 film back. Tough to handle in the dark, but good 70mm film, none the less.
 

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Plus-X and FP4 are my favorites for 100 ASA.

They still look like film B&W with nice grain and contrast. In 120, the grain is not apparent anymore.

I don't like modern 100 ASA which are pretty much grain free but also too "grey" for my taste.

One exception , Tmax 100 in Rodinal 1+50 is quite good!
 
The thing I've found Plus-x does better than any other film is long exposures on medium format. Its extended mid range gives a lovely palette of silvery grey tones. I develop it for this purpose in XTOL and am very pleased with the results.

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