
Originally Posted by
Bill Burk
mpålsson,
You say you saw: "ISO triangle came out to be very close to the 13’30” curve"
That's the developing time I get when I meet the ISO triangle for TMAX 100, TMY2 and TRI-X in D-76 1:1. So your times are exactly the same as mine.
For 4x5 I tray develop, shuffling constantly. For tanks, I agitate the Kodak way (invert a few times every 30 seconds).
I want to share a criticism of BTZS (or refinement if you accept). The EI fluctuations that BTZS recommends are based on observation that the 0.10 density above base+fog moves in relation to the exposure scale with different development times. BTZS concludes that the effective speed of film has varied, thus they conclude that you should respond by varying exposure.
Instead of changing the EI in the field for each sheet, I recommend that you adopt the full rated (box) speed of the film for incident metering, and reduce speed 2/3 stop beneath rated film speed when determining exposure by Spot metering (Zone System read spot and place on a shadow Zone).
I have had long discussions with Stephen Benskin about this and there is a history that the speed point 0.10 was selected because it is easy to find on graphs. It's not really the speed point. The actual speed point (determined by Loyd Jones experiments with thousands of prints judged by people) is at the point where the toe curves to about a third of average gradient.
That third of average doesn't move around very much with changes in development.
There's something called Delta-X that I follow instead of latching onto that 0.10 speed that fluctuates wildly.
In brief, 0.10 speed equals Delta-X speed when the curve meets the ISO triangle. But for developing times above and below, the Delta-X speed doesn't fluctuate much with development time.
Your graph by hand is a thing of beauty. If you would like to share all your numbers (the density readings of the step wedge patches for each developing time), I could graph for you on my paper and show how the Delta-X speeds overlay works.
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