And yes I have used a ribbed tray. Thanks for help. I will try to fix this issues in the future.
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And yes I have used a ribbed tray. Thanks for help. I will try to fix this issues in the future.
Considering the fact that you used a ribbed tray, the results are actually quite encouraging! Most of the unevenness seems to be caused by this; using a flat-bottomed tray should get rid of most of the problem. I see in the first image that the edges are still a little 'hot' from overdevelopment. As many others will assure you, only a bigger tray will solve this. I currently use a non-stick oven tray tray that's about 25x35cm (inner dimensions; ca. 10x14") and that seems to be just large enough for 8x10" film. For 4x5" x-ray film I use a tray that's about 13x19cm (~5x7.5") and that works fine. Don't waste your time on trays that are too small and that will just fit your film - I've been there, done that for dozens or probably even hundreds of sheets and the edges will _always_ develop faster than the center, no matter what magic you work with your body to ensure perfect agitation.
I would not recommend continuous agitation with double-sided x-ray film in trays, including flat-bottomed trays. You run the risk of "skuffing" and or scratching the emulsions. Gentle north/south, east/west every 30 seconds works very well for me. Flipping the emulsion can be good advice (I don't. I don't like sticking my fingers in Pyrocat), but be very careful to not scratch with your finger nails. Stay away from ribbed trays... or place a sheet of plexi inside.
I wish I could get even development the way you do it Andrew, but my mileage varies too much from yours, I'm afraid ;) How you get even development without flipping the film is beyond me (well, without stripping the backside of course) - count your blessings!
You're right about the scuffing and the scratching. This film scratches if you so much as look at it.
Here's one I did this afternoon. Doubled-sided green-sensitive at EI 50, Pyrocat HD 1.5+1.5+100, continuous agitation for about 9 minutes by gently rocking the tray from side to side for 5 times and then flipping the sheet over. Wearing gloves helps to keep the nasty pyrocat off the skin. Scan from negative; I develop these for Van Dyke printing and this negative is a tad on the thin side, but it prints quite alright.
http://www.koraks.nl/galleries/8x10_..._XRGPCHD_3.jpg
Do any of you try a vertical developing? like standard tank for 4x5 with frames? I guess for 8x10 film it will be a little problem to find such large and thin tank.
I'm sorry if you already discuss this, but this forum too big..
excellent work, I definitely should try this
Thanks; it's been a long and rocky road and I'm not quite there yet, but I'm finally getting somewhere at least.
I've successfully used tank development with hangers for X-ray film. Both 4x5 and 8x10.Pyrocat developer and various minimal agitation schemes. I make sure to agitate vigorously.
I haven't tried tank development personally, but I suspect that if you can live with the volumes of developer and fixer it requires, I think it should work very well indeed.