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welly
26-Jan-2010, 20:05
Not sure if anyone saw it but I mentioned in a post I had a film of (mostly) unknown type that needs developing. I know it's an Ilford and I know it's one of Pan F (50), FP4 (125) or HP5 (400). I suspect it's either FP4 or HP5 though. Can anyone suggest what would be the best approach to developing this film without losing the contents through over or under developing?

Cheers!

Pat Kearns
26-Jan-2010, 20:34
Looking at my old Photo Lab Index for Ilford Pan F & FP4 using Ilford developers:
Pan F at 68F
Developer Dilution Time
ID-11 1 + 1 7 minutes
1 + 3 11.5 minutes
Microphen 1 + 1 4 minutes
1 + 3 7 minutes
Perceptol 1 + 1 10.5 minutes
1 + 3 13.5 minutes

FP4 at 68F
ID-11 1 + 1 9 minutes
1 + 3 12 minutes
Microphen 1 + 1 7.5 minutes
1 + 3 15 minutes
This is a starting point, hope it helps.

David Karp
26-Jan-2010, 20:47
Develop it in a 2 bath developer like Diafine. Time and temp won't matter in Diafine.

JRFrench
26-Jan-2010, 22:39
Unwind it a little in the darkroom, snip a frame or so off, dev that to read the film name on the edge of the film, assuming 120 film has this like 135, I don't know I've never used it.

welly
26-Jan-2010, 23:35
Unwind it a little in the darkroom, snip a frame or so off, dev that to read the film name on the edge of the film, assuming 120 film has this like 135, I don't know I've never used it.

Ah awesome, good thinking. I'll try that.

Ash
27-Jan-2010, 03:58
Make sure you take it from the right end so you don't end up losing a photo from the roll....

From a Blad you find the excess at the non-tap end.... but on all my folding cameras it's either on the tape end, or there's an inch either end I think

Wallace_Billingham
27-Jan-2010, 11:41
Do it in Rodinal 1:100 for 10 minutes at 68 degrees. it won't be perfect developement it will get you very usable negs no matter what the film stock

JRFrench
27-Jan-2010, 11:50
Make sure you take it from the right end so you don't end up losing a photo from the roll....

From a Blad you find the excess at the non-tap end.... but on all my folding cameras it's either on the tape end, or there's an inch either end I think

Losing one shot is better than losing 12 :)

Brian Schall
27-Jan-2010, 11:54
Or you could use Rodinal 1:200 for 1 hour. Agitate the first 30 sec and then come back in an hour and finish it up. This seems to work with almost any film.

sanking
27-Jan-2010, 12:27
Develop it in a 2 bath developer like Diafine. Time and temp won't matter in Diafine.

I second the two bath approach and Diafine should give maximum shadow detail without the risk of blowing out the highlight.

If these were my negatives I would not seriously consider any other approach other than two bath development.

Sandy King