Results 1 to 4 of 4

Thread: Efke 50 sheet film, HC110, Jobo Drum

  1. #1

    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Hong Kong
    Posts
    176

    Efke 50 sheet film, HC110, Jobo Drum

    Hi all,

    I have just bought one pack of Efke 50 (4x5) sheet film, and have done
    some tests. The result is strange for me.

    ND (@ISO25): 6min, HC110 1:99 (Yes, 1:99) in Jobo 2840
    paper drum, approx 10 rpm hand rotation (@20 DegC)

    N+1 (@ISO40): 11min, HC110 1:99 (@20 DegC)

    Anyone got any similar result ??

    Thanks, Jack

  2. #2

    Re: Efke 50 sheet film, HC110, Jobo Drum

    If you get N dev at 6 minutes and N+1 at 11 minutes they seem a bit far apart, but you are using high dilution, which can explain things. ISO 25 and 40 seems normal.

    //Björn

  3. #3

    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Hong Kong
    Posts
    176

    Re: Efke 50 sheet film, HC110, Jobo Drum

    I feel it so strange, b/c the dev. time from efke is about HC100(B), 7 min, ISO50 ..
    which is very big different from mine ...

    I will do some field time later this week ....

  4. #4
    Donald Qualls's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    North Carolina
    Posts
    1,092

    Re: Efke 50 sheet film, HC110, Jobo Drum

    Your dilution is weaker than the published Dilution B, which would tend to lengthen your time relative to theirs, but you're agitating continuously, while the published time is most likely for intermittent agitation. My experience over a range of films and developers is that agitation can effectively run on seven levels: continuous, 30 second cycle, 1 minute, 3 minute, five minute, semi-stand, and full stand (this applies to tanks where the film is fully submerged and doesn't have another sheet against the emulsion; in trays or partially filled "rolling" tubes, other factors intervene), with each step corresponding to approximately 50% change in the development time to give the same contrast (but no change in true film speed, if agitation is all you change -- the shadow areas get the same development with any agitation, because agitation reduces local exhaustion which doesn't occur where there's very little exposed halide to develop). That makes your 1+99 at 6 minutes, continuous agitation, about equivalent to the published 1+31 at 7 minutes with agitation every minute (you're at roughly 3x for dilution, and 1/2 for two agitation steps; give or take some variance in your desired contrast vs. theirs and some fudge factor for the time it takes developer to soak into dry gelatin before actual development starts, that's what a researcher would call "not a statistically significant difference").

    Different films require different amounts of development adjustment to change contrast, and a very high dilution increases local exhaustion, which tends to decrease contrast; roughly doubling time instead of adding 20-40% isn't at all out of line with your high dilution regardless of the film used.
    If a contact print at arm's length is too small to see, you need a bigger camera. :D

Similar Threads

  1. Jobo 2521 or ...
    By Matus Kalisky in forum Darkroom: Film, Processing & Printing
    Replies: 13
    Last Post: 25-Jul-2022, 08:26
  2. The hopeful future of film photography
    By Ed Eubanks in forum On Photography
    Replies: 414
    Last Post: 20-Feb-2011, 07:41
  3. Developing 8x10 sheet film in JOBO CPE processor?
    By Emil Ems in forum Darkroom: Film, Processing & Printing
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: 29-May-2010, 17:56
  4. Depth of Field, Depth of Focus, and Film Flatness
    By robc in forum Cameras & Camera Accessories
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: 6-Jan-2006, 14:44
  5. Efke Sheet Film Availability
    By Kevin Kemner in forum Darkroom: Film, Processing & Printing
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 1-Nov-2000, 04:57

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •