alexz
Well-known
Developed my second roll of Neopan 1600, just 10 test exposures, bulk-loaded.
Developed in HC110, dill H, 20 deg.C, for 14 minutes, moderate agitation. Massive Dev. Chart suggests 7 minutes for dill. B, so I took twice as long for twice as dilluted solution (as I used to for Tri-X).
The results yelded yet extreme, non-tolerable contrast. I'm pretty sure in my exposures, all were shoot indoors under constant illumination and metered by hand-held incident meter. Have never failed on me yet, so I tend to believe this isn't case of severe underexposure.
What would processing experts say ? Does it seem as under/over development ? Or probably the real speed of that film is considerably slower then its factory-rated 1600 ?
Attached are few examples...
Developed in HC110, dill H, 20 deg.C, for 14 minutes, moderate agitation. Massive Dev. Chart suggests 7 minutes for dill. B, so I took twice as long for twice as dilluted solution (as I used to for Tri-X).
The results yelded yet extreme, non-tolerable contrast. I'm pretty sure in my exposures, all were shoot indoors under constant illumination and metered by hand-held incident meter. Have never failed on me yet, so I tend to believe this isn't case of severe underexposure.
What would processing experts say ? Does it seem as under/over development ? Or probably the real speed of that film is considerably slower then its factory-rated 1600 ?
Attached are few examples...