ABrosig
Well-known
This is a raw scan, unmanipulated/corrected, from a roll of 120 Ektar 100 Kodak Film,fresh film, purchased this week. It was shot in a Kodak Brownie Target Six-20, but I'm 99.9 percent sure it isn't the camera, as I've shot a dozen or more rolls of black-and-white without this kind of uneven-appearing development or spotting. I'm also pretty sure it's not my developing technique - this was souped in a Jobo C-41 kit which, while not brand-spanking new and fresh, has had less than 10 roll(closer to 6 than 10) processed in the chemistry. Also, a roll of 135 Kodak Portra 160 NC (Outdated) processed at the same time came out fine.
All that said, here's the scan:

I'm hoping someone can tell me, from this, is there an issue with Ektar developing in a Stainless Steel tank, following directions that came with the chemistry re. time/temp/agitation, or is there something about the Portra I don't know about, messing with my Ektar? I've never seen this kind of unevenness/spotting, etc., in other film of different types/speeds (Mostly Fuji, but some Kodak) souped with this batch of chemistry.
Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated.
All that said, here's the scan:

I'm hoping someone can tell me, from this, is there an issue with Ektar developing in a Stainless Steel tank, following directions that came with the chemistry re. time/temp/agitation, or is there something about the Portra I don't know about, messing with my Ektar? I've never seen this kind of unevenness/spotting, etc., in other film of different types/speeds (Mostly Fuji, but some Kodak) souped with this batch of chemistry.
Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated.