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Thread: 8x20 daylight processing tank

  1. #11

    Re: 8x20 daylight processing tank

    Quote Originally Posted by Alan9940 View Post
    Just got a newsletter from Tim this morning referencing Tim Layton and that Stearman is going to accept custom orders for this tray soon. But, the price is for the "fat of wallet" crowd.
    The blind leading the blind IMHO. Tim seems like a very competent photographer so I am rather surprised that he would lay his integrity on such am unstable premise.

    The proof will be in the markets "buy in". If there was a way I could short this business proposition, I would be on the phone with my broker ASAP.

    'In a couple of months this concept will dry up like Death Valley in July. Innovation that works I am doing backflips off of office desks. Attempting to extrapolate revenue streams where they create more problems than they resolve - I am an archer.

  2. #12

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    Re: 8x20 daylight processing tank

    Its by Stearman..... I thought that was a given?

  3. #13

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    Re: 8x20 daylight processing tank

    Question- in tray development does a single sheet of film tend to float or sink? In a tube it tends to float up when washing. Or is that variable by film stock?
    The magic you are looking for is in the work you are avoiding.
    http://www.searing.photography

  4. #14
    Corran's Avatar
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    Re: 8x20 daylight processing tank

    My personal findings with tray processing 4x5 up to 12x20 was that excessive amounts of chemistry was the cause of poor development more so than not enough. Perhaps it's the way I agitate but I've found this to be true, along with the need to not be overly aggressive with the agitation.

    This product isn't for me but nice to see new products for ULF.
    Bryan | Blog | YouTube | Instagram | Portfolio
    All comments and thoughtful critique welcome

  5. #15

    Re: 8x20 daylight processing tank

    Quote Originally Posted by Corran View Post
    My personal findings with tray processing 4x5 up to 12x20 was that excessive amounts of chemistry was the cause of poor development more so than not enough. Perhaps it's the way I agitate but I've found this to be true, along with the need to not be overly aggressive with the agitation.

    This product isn't for me but nice to see new products for ULF.
    My $0.02 on this topic. The quantity of chemistry takes a back seat to the developer itself and the ratio being deployed. This dictates the film/developer chemical reaction and the subsequent optimal development time. A proper pre wash and effective agitation is the key. Learned this lesson by sheer persistence as failure is an excellent teacher. Large sheets of film are far more challenging than smaller ones (as you already know) in the sense that one has to maintain consistent control of the sheets through the process in rhythmic motion (ie sheet movement and velocity of the developer over the film surface). But it works. Large quantities of developer come along for the ride as the tray size is always one size larger than the format. Quite honestly a 22" long piece of 4" black plastic tube with a hard cap glued on one end and a rubber on the other end (less the screw clamp) costs under $10 and does the job with dilute pyrocat in an RAD development process with 100% success. You need a thin rod to get behind the film to release it from the walls of the tube after development, but that is not that big a deal. Plus you have a tool to manage extreme N- and N+ objectives. For both tray and RAD development the infrared monocle is invaluable. The cross over with ULF from my perspective is when you screw up three sheets of ULF in a the development process after which this process gets discarded in short order. That is why I recommend the least cost and most simplistic regiment come first with ULF film development as it is easier on your pocketbook. ULF photographers cry when they have to buy sheet film. That is enough drama for most folks.
    Last edited by Michael Kadillak; 3-Nov-2022 at 08:11. Reason: typo

  6. #16
    Rick Olson's Avatar
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    Re: 8x20 daylight processing tank

    Quote Originally Posted by Michael Kadillak View Post
    I venture to say that anyone that has ventured into ULF (ie formats other than the standards) falls into a category of what is called personal overachievement. Concurrently they are introduced bluntly into the category of the challenges that come along for the ride if they have any experience in this arena. From light leaks at the flap end of wooden holders (if injection moulded holders are not an option) to underexposure from unintentionally not remembering that you are experiencing macro conditions (the larger the format the more challenging this becomes), etc. Then you get to the price of admission with sheet film which just flat out sucks. From my personal experience my least concern is how much developer a reliable development process requires. And I am not talking about 90-95% reliability because that does not work in this domain. I am talking 100% reliability. There is nothing more discerning IMHO than in the back of your mind having to burn a second sheet of $15+ ULF film on a "special" scene because you do not have the absolute confidence that your negative processing regime will not fail you and praying that one of the negatives comes out as you desire. The stakes are simply too high. From my perspective these daylight tray film developing options are wonderful for the smaller format photographers that are constrained in the inability to have a darkroom within which to work which justifies the risk profile with them. If they are not "perfect" that is an acceptable premise because a darkroom is not in the cards so they are willing, ready and able to take that operational risk and work through it. The reality is the size of the ULF sheets, the dynamics of the flow patterns over such a large surface area and more critically the stronger dilutions necessary to use such smaller volume of developer all factually conspire to create a host of risk factors that I know will be totally unacceptable to the desire of the ULF photographer in the results he or she is in pursuit of. Put this into perspective. In 8x20 you have 160 square inches of continuous film which is in need of perfectly uniform chemistry / film surface interaction. That is the equivalent of 8 4x5 sheets of film in the tray in the form of one sheet in one run. Massive quantities of diluted chemistry is the direction this conversation should be going not the other way around. I understand the pursuit of the optimal scenario in this instance and I am not wanting to rain on anyone's parade. I am just attempting to be the voice of sensible reason in this instance and pointing readers with ambitions with ULF to stay in your lane with processes that are in fact 100% reliable as there is no need to try to cut corners in this instance because of the inherent risk. If someone has in fact shown that these alternatives are in fact completely reliable in smaller sizes and through 8x20 I will be more than happy to tip my hat in amazement. Until that time I would recommend the time tested options even if they use far more chemistry or are more cumbersome. After all at the end of a day the finished print cannot sing until the negative is capable of telling it what key the song is in.
    Agreed Michael. I photograph with 8x20 and used drum and tray rocking processing early on in my journey and had flow patterns and other issues. Developer - Pyrocat-HD/MC. I now only process my film by brush development and it is flawless. Still with Pyrocat-HD/MC.

  7. #17

    Re: 8x20 daylight processing tank

    Quote Originally Posted by Rick Olson View Post
    Agreed Michael. I photograph with 8x20 and used drum and tray rocking processing early on in my journey and had flow patterns and other issues. Developer - Pyrocat-HD/MC. I now only process my film by brush development and it is flawless. Still with Pyrocat-HD/MC.
    Fantastic Rick. Finding your personal "sweet Spot" with 8x20 negative processing (or any other ULF format) to an optimal result is a truly monumental achievement. Each photographer chases their own intuitive instincts and either finds success with a process OR moves on to the next option in rather rapid succession. Brush development (which is a very inexpensive option by the way) was on my list of "options" to work with. However I spent some time in Bucks County PA. with Michael Smith and Paula Chamlee with them showing me the tray development process. Being instructed in the time tested process there was a tremendous uplifting experience. That being said, anyone that tells you that processing a ULF negative is not a challenging experience is either lying or has someone else doing it for them. It is as challenging as anything within the photographic domain. Later on I found Reduced Agitation Development (RAD) process which was another tool in my tool box with multiple sheets (4X5 through 8x10) in a 3.5 gallon tank with gaseous burst and individual tube RAD development in 8x20, 11x14 and 12x20 which is as fool proof as brush development. At the end of the day, results are al that matters. How we got there is relatively meaningless as the print is all that matters.

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