Tri-X Sheet Film Development

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Now that Kodak has pulled the plug on most 5"x7" Black & White film I could some help. I have been shooting T-Max and some Plus-X for the last ten years. Can anyone tell me what developers I might try with Tri-X sheet fi

-- Bruce E. Rathbun (brath@iquest.net), December 22, 2000

Answers

Bruce: My favorite developer with Tri-X is HC-110. I like the brilliance of the negatives and the contrast in the shadow detail with this developer. Also, D-67 is an excellent developer. You might also try T-Max RS, which gives good results. Don't use regular T-Max as it leaves a scum that is difficult to remove. I rate Tri-X professional at 160 and develop at 68 degrees for five minutes. Hope this helps,

-- Doug Paramore (dougmary@alaweb.com), December 22, 2000.

I find that using Rodinal at 1-25 or 1-50 and adding a few minutes more to dev time, and doing half as many inversions gives me good negs (although my inversions are slightly more vigorous than others). I've also heard that Paterson Fx-39 can give superb negs.

-- David (david_j_kirk@hotmail.com), December 23, 2000.

PMK Pyro and Tri-X.....just absolutely elegant!

-- Jon Abernathy (jona@aol.com), December 23, 2000.

Jon: I am planning to do some testing on PMK Pyro. Where can I get more info?

Thanks,

Doug.

-- Doug Paramore (dougmary@alaweb.com), December 23, 2000.


I have times for PMK on my site at:

http://unblinkingeye.com/Articles/Developers/Times_PMK/times_pmk.htm

You can use them as a starting point. I also recommend obtaining Gordon Hutching's 'The Book of Pyro' for all the fine nuances of using PMK.

-- Ed Buffaloe (edb@unblinkingeye.com), December 24, 2000.



Thanks for all of the responses. This is good information to know. I did have a question on the HC-110 for Doug. Do you use dilution B? Also I hear that Pyro can stain a negative. Is this true and what is the end result? Again thanks for the responses.

Bruce E. Rath

-- Bruce E. Rathbun (brath@iquest.net), December 26, 2000.


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