bill_zelinski Posted January 24, 2000 Share Posted January 24, 2000 Does anyone have development times for Delta 3200 shot at 1250 with either ID-11 or D-76? Ilford seems to have nothing on Delta 3200 development on thier web site. Thanks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
john_hicks Posted January 24, 2000 Share Posted January 24, 2000 Don't even think about that; you'll get slightly high contrast and all of EI 800. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mph Posted January 24, 2000 Share Posted January 24, 2000 Actually, Ilford's got the <ahref="http://www.ilford.com/html/us_english/bw.html">data sheets</a>for most or all of their products on their web site. The D3200 sheetgives D-76, 8 minutes, 68 F, for EI 800 and 9.5 minutes for EI 1600. I've never tried D3200 in D-76, but whenever I've tried John Hicks'advice it's been spot-on, so I'd pay attention to him. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
brian_hinther Posted January 24, 2000 Share Posted January 24, 2000 I can tell you Ilford's recommendation of 10= minutes at 3200 is woefully inadequate. Last time I tried 13 minutes and thought it could use a bit more. I'd say the least you'd want to try at 1250 would be 10 minutes (at 680), and probably more. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bill_zelinski Posted January 26, 2000 Author Share Posted January 26, 2000 thanks, per J.Hicks from a different post I used X-tol 1:1 for about 11 min and it worked very well given that these were high key studio portraits, this was kind of an experiment and I just had some ID-11 left over and hate to waste it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shawn_stupidpost Posted January 30, 2000 Share Posted January 30, 2000 <i>these were high key studio portraits</i> <p> I'd really like to see high-key studio work with a really fast film. I've been thinking about trying such myself. Do you have the ability to post or email some of your results? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
richard_saunders Posted February 3, 2000 Share Posted February 3, 2000 Try this site. http://www.chris-iris.com/charts.shtml <p> It suggests that ID-11 gives slightly finer grain than D-76. It also gives slightly different EI and times for some films in D76 or ID-11. In the "film developement cookbook" it suggests that D76 formulated to be more consistant with different water supplies. ID11 at 1:1 has given me some really excellant negatives over the years. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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