I am hoping someone can give me an idea of what developers are good for developing 4x5 sheet film in a Nitrogen Gas Burst set up.
Any suggestions would be a great help.
Gord
I am hoping someone can give me an idea of what developers are good for developing 4x5 sheet film in a Nitrogen Gas Burst set up.
Any suggestions would be a great help.
Gord
The lab I worked in (1990's) used Tmax RS.
Prior to my tenure there, I think they used HC-110, but I'm not sure of the dilution.
A lab, that I sometimes use, uses Ilford DD in their dip-and-dunk machine.
Last edited by MultiFormat Shooter; 23-Apr-2022 at 18:21. Reason: typo
Yessiree...dippin' and drinkin' - works for me!
Basically any developer should work fine, but I guess this will come down to the size of the system and how much film you tend to process. For example if you are doing relatively low throughput and using developers one-shot, the kinds of solution volumes typically involved in gas burst/deep tanks will get pretty expensive. I think alternatively most people would prefer replenishment for this kind of thing. Replenished XTOL would be my choice for a variety of reasons but there are other options.
The local lab uses replenished Xtol in their dip and dunk machine. But I do all my own b&w processing, and don't have a bit of personal experience with Xtol, so can't comment further.
Pyrocat HD
Thanks for all the comments. I tried HC110 a couple of years ago and wasn't happy with the results plus the fact there was no source of a replenisher. I have some old D76 and D76R but it eneded up being to old and the D76 chemistry would not completely dissolve and remained cloudy. I have some old cans of DK50 and replenisher and I might that give that a go or the 5L XTOL which the Camera Store has in stock. The Gas Burst tanks that I have allow processing of 4X5 or 5X7 film but take about 4.5L of chemistry. I have a lot of film and intend to shoot as much of it as I can this year so that is why I am digging the Gas Burst tanks out. I processed 18 sheets of 4X5 yesterday 6 sheets at a time on Kodak Tanks but doing 12 sheets at a time seems like a way of saving a lot of time. I am not familiar with Pyrocat so I hadn't have that developer as an option but I will look into it.
I wouldn't trust any pyro formula except one-shot, and am not personally aware of any replenishable variety, at least in a consistent sense.
One shot is how I use Pyrocat.
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