Kodak P3200 in Perceptol ?

aldobonnard

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Hi,
the other day I loaded a kodak P3200, and implicitely thinking that as with Delta 3200, I'd use perceptol therefore I set manually minus 2/3 stop on the M7 back dial (should have thought, I know...I was maybe guided by the "3200" figure only)
I realise now that I have no idea what time Kodak P3200 would require in perceptol... D3200 is 18', maybe it's a good base ?
Another alternative could be to develop in another developer and not bother with perceptol, but I've already shot with minus 2/3 stop therefore the standard times for ilford-DDX or Microphen (I've got both here on hand) are also messed up...
Any advice on both little problems ?
thanks a lot
 
Uhhh...

True ISO at an informed guess: 500-650.

Sure, try Perceptol but give 15-30% more development.

Alternatively, dev. for your normal (Delta 3200) time in either DD-X or Microphen. You may find the tonality delightful!

Cheers,

R.
 
Hi Roger, I think when aiming at developing with Perceptol, Ilford recommends to tell your camera that your film sensitivity is 2/3 stop lower, which is what I did. I have always found it a bit weird that Ilford did not give recommended times for the actual sensitivity once developed with Perceptol. Because it is clear that if one sets its camera -for instance- at ISO400, it will mean once developed in Perceptol, that the actual sensitivity is 250 (or "was").
I will try based on the Delta + XX% (I'd think as you, around 20-25%, and let you know how it turns out...
Next time, Ilford DDX and Delta, it was only that now the DDX bottle was empty!
Merci
 
ok guys...here are the results...
NOT RECOMMENDED !
:)
I guess I overdevelopped it; next time I'll stick to some normal developer.
sorry not very useful...but research progresses mostly by exclusions, doesn't it?..
 
I gave up playing with developers about 10 years back. I did a massive investigation to find the correct times for HC110, D76 various dilutions, percetol at various, Xtol various, DDx, then went out and did a landscape and developed and printed all the negs meticuously. Then you lay out all the prints and pick what you like. Practically there is not a whole lot of differece except for high dilution, like D76 1:3. stuff that gets grainy and sharp.

The other thing I learned was Ilford Delta 400, the current varient, only looks good in Xtol and DDX. Thr previous two versions gone for 5+ years now, worked well in D76.
It is outstanding in those developers, but I dilike them both for various reasons. New T Max 400 looks beautiful in D76 so now I am back to Kodak.
So pick something and learn to use it and don`t waste time looking for some magic formula. It can not be found.

If you want cleaner images, bigger format is the true answer. Digital is even better.
 
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