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Thread: Timing large format tray development

  1. #1

    Join Date
    Dec 1999
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    4

    Timing large format tray development

    I am new to large format and would like to know what people do about timing tray development of film in total darkness. Thanks.

  2. #2

    Join Date
    Sep 1998
    Posts
    206

    Timing large format tray development

    Shine the white lights on the Gra-Lab for a few minutes, then turn them all off and go for it. The big numbers and hands are easy to see in the dark.

  3. #3

    Join Date
    Dec 1997
    Location
    Baraboo, Wisconsin
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    7,697

    Timing large format tray development

    Some timers, such as the Zone VI compensating development timer, have audible beeps periodically (the Zone VI beeps every thirty seconds). It's pretty easy to cover the red lights in the timer with a cloth or piece of tape and then count the beeps to keep track of the time.
    Brian Ellis
    Before you criticize someone, walk a mile in their shoes. That way when you do criticize them you'll be
    a mile away and you'll have their shoes.

  4. #4

    Join Date
    Sep 1999
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    449

    Timing large format tray development

    Charles, what kind of timer do you have?

  5. #5

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    Sep 1998
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    Oregon now (formerly Austria)
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    3,397

    Timing large format tray development

    Charles, I have used several methods successfully. If you have a good old Gra- Lab, simply set it up where you can see it glowing in the dark but the film in the tray can't. (I doubt whether the low-intensity green glow of a Gra-Lab would fog your film even if the film were exposed to it as long as it was a few feet away.) The Zone VI compensating timer (which I now use almost exclusively for temperature control reasons) has a setting for film which dims the display to safe levels, but can still be read. It also beeps every 30 seconds to remind you to agitate. At my appartment in Vienna (where I only have makeshift negative developing facilities) I use a digital oven timer and a quartz metronome (a loudly-ticking quartz clock will do as well). I use the metronome to keep track of agitation and transfer the film from developer to stop when the oven timer alarm goes off. In a pinch I have simply counted seconds with a metronome or a clock, but this can be hard to keep track of. I am comfortable with all of my methods and they work equally well as far as timing is concerned. Hope this helps. ;^D)

  6. #6

    Join Date
    May 1998
    Posts
    218

    Timing large format tray development

    I just use a clockwork darkroom stop-clock with luminous hands. Before I got it, I did some neat programming on a beeping laptop computer. It workeed, but I prefer the clock.

  7. #7

    Join Date
    Jul 1998
    Location
    Lund, Sweden
    Posts
    2,214

    Timing large format tray development

    I have a kitchen timer that beeps once a second when the timer has counted all the way down. I just set it for ten seconds less than the desired time and count ten beeps before acting.

  8. #8

    Timing large format tray development

    I just divide 30 seconds by the number of sheets I am developing and count out (mentally) the seconds between moving a sheet from the bottom to the top of the stack. It works for me, and I seem to get very consistent results. By the way, I have used daylight development tanks also, but never gotten results as good as simply using trays.

    Mark

  9. #9

    Timing large format tray development

    I have found it much easier to go to rotory processing. But when I was in the dark ages I used a Graylab. I painted the hands with bright yellow dayglo paint. No fogging at all. james

  10. #10

    Join Date
    Sep 1999
    Posts
    449

    Timing large format tray development

    Have the wife stand outside the darkroom door with a watch, and call out when it's time to agitate or move from developer to short stop. That way, when you screw up you can blame her. For example, if your mind is elsewhere and you start the sequence in the right hand tray instead of the left, putting the film in the fixer first, then the shortstop and developer. It really helps to have somebody else to yell at. Other than that I recommend that you get one of the big luminous dial Gra-lab timers; mine is still going after 48 years.

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