Barry Thornton's two-bath question about time and temperature

Dog Opposites

A
Dog Opposites

  • 0
  • 1
  • 43
Acrobatics in the Vondelpark

A
Acrobatics in the Vondelpark

  • 5
  • 2
  • 112
Finn Slough Fishing Net

A
Finn Slough Fishing Net

  • 1
  • 0
  • 76
Dried roses

A
Dried roses

  • 10
  • 7
  • 149
Hot Rod

A
Hot Rod

  • 4
  • 0
  • 98

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
197,460
Messages
2,759,398
Members
99,509
Latest member
Tiarchi
Recent bookmarks
0
Joined
Jan 28, 2023
Messages
946
Location
Wilammette Valley, Oregon
Format
35mm RF
Sorry Paul, I was talking about effects of minimal or regular agitation in water bath or earlier in B bath. On my negatives developed in Rodinal I can clearly see benefits of after water bath. It's my habit to process short strips of film (3-5 frames) to see what is going on. As somebody who has been bitten by "snakes" of under agitation I will stay away from any sort of "minimal" agitation with any developer.

My apologies, I misinterpreted what you said!
 
OP
OP
What About Bob

What About Bob

Subscriber
Joined
Aug 23, 2019
Messages
543
Location
Northampton, MA.
Format
Analog
1) I have found that for my needs, many (most?) films perform better at a minimum of five minutes in Bath A, and in some cases I extent the time in A to 6.5 minutes. I don't exceed 5 minutes in Bath B. I have experimented with increasing the time in Bath A as much as 8 minutes and it had no negative effects on a film like Tmax 100. (Click to see example)
High contrast, slow speed films like Ferrania Orto perform beautifully at the standard 4.5 minutes in each bath. It tames some of the contrast without making negs look "soft". See example here.

2) I have also found that BTTB reduces effective film speed by about 1 and a half stops for many films. For certain circumstances, that is excessive, but with how I work, it's not unreasonable in many cases where I use a tripod and long exposures. The Ferrania Orto produced great negs at 25 ASA, so just one stop under box speed.

3) I find certain films really sing in BTTB and others produce mediocre images. Fomapan 400 and 100 produce beautiful negatives in BTTB.

I am finding that a minimum of five minutes, maybe even six, in bath A may be the ticket for Tri-X. Other times I would give slightly less development in bath A when exposing at a lower EI, for example Kentmere, but in the last two cases with Tri-X exposed at EI 250 I went ahead with the five minutes and also increasing the metaborate amount to 20 grams per liter instead of the usual 12 grams and I must say I really like the results.

There was always a belief in my head that if I agitated too much in bath B that this would dissolve out the embedded developer too quickly but from what a few posts have indicated that this isn't the case? When Barry mentioned about not agitating for three minutes this sort of reinforced what I was thinking about agitation, inverting, too soon; in that doing so would wash out the left over developer before it had any chance to do its work but again from what I have been reading here that even regular agitation routines work out to be fine.

When I started with BT2B I did one very slow inversion for each minute and then I went to doing less inversions and finally doing the "only one" inversion in between the total time. In my eyes I haven't noticed any differences in any of the inversion techniques for bath B.

I am very glad that others have interest in this topic. Big thanks to Chuck and everyone here contributing their knowledge and testing. Anything having to do with BT2B is a win and is very welcome.
 

Alex Benjamin

Subscriber
Joined
Aug 8, 2018
Messages
2,241
Location
Montreal
Format
Multi Format
Tried BTTB with Delta 400 rated @ 200. 5 minutes in each bath. Works wonderfully.

Printed grade 2 on Fomabrom 112. Work print, no burning, no dodging (print here is floating in washaid).

20250117_171057-fotor-20250119182853.jpg
 

John Wiegerink

Subscriber
Joined
May 29, 2009
Messages
3,469
Location
Lake Station, MI
Format
Multi Format
Alex,
That's what surprised me also when I started playing with BTTB. I use an older Ilford Ilfospeed 400 VC head and don't think I have ever had a negative that printed near perfect the first try when the head was set at G2, but that's what happened using this developer. It's God awful easy and almost seems like cheating.
 

Alex Benjamin

Subscriber
Joined
Aug 8, 2018
Messages
2,241
Location
Montreal
Format
Multi Format
Alex,
That's what surprised me also when I started playing with BTTB. I use an older Ilford Ilfospeed 400 VC head and don't think I have ever had a negative that printed near perfect the first try when the head was set at G2, but that's what happened using this developer. It's God awful easy and almost seems like cheating.

Same feeling 😄. If you get the exposure right, printing really becomes a matter of finding the right grade. That's what makes split-grade printing so interesting with BTTB. Because you don't have to fight with you negative, it opens it to various interpretations.

But it won't save your neg if you don't get the exposure right. I have a few to prove that... 🙄
 

John Wiegerink

Subscriber
Joined
May 29, 2009
Messages
3,469
Location
Lake Station, MI
Format
Multi Format
Same feeling 😄. If you get the exposure right, printing really becomes a matter of finding the right grade. That's what makes split-grade printing so interesting with BTTB. Because you don't have to fight with you negative, it opens it to various interpretations.

But it won't save your neg if you don't get the exposure right. I have a few to prove that... 🙄
Alex,
You're right about getting your exposure right. I don't think it's really a matter of getting your exposure "spot-on" right, but more a matter of getting it close. You get your exposure close, then pick the right filtration and the rest just seems to fall, and I do mean fall, right in place. I will never dump my Pyrocat-HDC developer or my XT-3R, but BTTB, or something along the same lines, sure makes difficult lighting shots print easier.
 

Chuck_P

Subscriber
Joined
Feb 2, 2004
Messages
2,369
Location
Kentucky
Format
4x5 Format
With the weather here having been either wet, real cloudy and gray, or too cold, I have spent the past few days completing my curve family using BT2B developer........and it wouldn't have mattered if the weather was great, I would've completed it anyway, I think it's valuable time and film spent. I will say that when I started this endeavor of mixing my own developer and starting with BT2B, I did not anticipate using it to develop TMX relative to "N+" development. I figured I'd be using XTOL for those and relying on BT2B for when needing that compensating effect. But in my searching and reading I found that it was certainly a warranted and doable thing. I had some confusion at first on the term "divided" versus "two bath" (AA called it "two solution"). A true "divided" developer, if I understand it correctly, would not have much or very little development occurring in bath A. But I've just opened myself up and may still be displaying some confusion on the process, idk.

So here is my BT2B curve family. I don't know if I needed to actually develop bath B for as long as bath A when I got to the longer development in the 7.5 min and 9 min range, so I did so just to be consistent. I "think" someone mentioned early on that extended time in bath B was not harmful to the outcome. Adjusting the 4.5 min curve to the left with its whopping 1 2/3 stop loss of speed does not allow the curve to reach the N-2 mark but it is on that trajectory. What I like about that curve is that when I compare it to my N-2 curve with TMX and XTOL 1+0, the BT2B curve exceeds the densities obtained on the XTOL curve from Zone I 1/2 to Zone IV 1/2, not by much but it does exceed it, indicating beneficial development in those low value areas. As to the 9 min curve, it clearly allows me to interpolate the development time downward to try and hit that target better but I'd do that pictorially, not with another test sheet.

As can be seen by the EI's for each curve, all had to be shifted back to the left on the log exposure scale by 1 2/3 to 1 1/3 stop to reflect a Zone I density of 0.1...........just the basic fixed speed point method of determining speed with the ZS. As you can see the target for "N" development times is a Zone VIII density of 1.2 +- 0.05 (indicated by the red dashes above and below each target) to try and develop the negative to a relatively consistent NDR of 1.1 from Zone I to VIII. I found it interesting that the 5.5 min curve reflects EI40 and the 6 min curve reflects EI32, I would've thought it would show the reverse.

And I say with all due respect, there is no need for opinions on flaws associated with how speed is determined using the ZS, it's not my intent to spark a discussion in this thread on what some think is a better way, thank you. I'm just reporting that's how I've done it here and how I've always done it. I can't find any reasons to argue with my results so far.

I look forward to giving these curves their pictorial chances going forward. I'm certainly open to constructive criticism on how better to utilize BT2B as it pertains to these curves or perhaps possible better development time and agitation scenarios with A and B, which I'd be glad to implement at some point in the future. I'm also, intrigued with that idea of having two other bath B mixtures available, one with 7g of sodium metaborate and one with 20g of sodium metaborate for use in dealing with different SBR's using BT2B.


BT2B  Curve Family_1100L.jpg
 
Joined
Jan 28, 2023
Messages
946
Location
Wilammette Valley, Oregon
Format
35mm RF
With the weather here having been either wet, real cloudy and gray, or too cold, I have spent the past few days completing my curve family using BT2B developer........and it wouldn't have mattered if the weather was great, I would've completed it anyway, I think it's valuable time and film spent. I will say that when I started this endeavor of mixing my own developer and starting with BT2B, I did not anticipate using it to develop TMX relative to "N+" development. I figured I'd be using XTOL for those and relying on BT2B for when needing that compensating effect. But in my searching and reading I found that it was certainly a warranted and doable thing. I had some confusion at first on the term "divided" versus "two bath" (AA called it "two solution"). A true "divided" developer, if I understand it correctly, would not have much or very little development occurring in bath A. But I've just opened myself up and may still be displaying some confusion on the process, idk.

So here is my BT2B curve family. I don't know if I needed to actually develop bath B for as long as bath A when I got to the longer development in the 7.5 min and 9 min range, so I did so just to be consistent. I "think" someone mentioned early on that extended time in bath B was not harmful to the outcome. Adjusting the 4.5 min curve to the left with its whopping 1 2/3 stop loss of speed does not allow the curve to reach the N-2 mark but it is on that trajectory. What I like about that curve is that when I compare it to my N-2 curve with TMX and XTOL 1+0, the BT2B curve exceeds the densities obtained on the XTOL curve from Zone I 1/2 to Zone IV 1/2, not by much but it does exceed it, indicating beneficial development in those low value areas. As to the 9 min curve, it clearly allows me to interpolate the development time downward to try and hit that target better but I'd do that pictorially, not with another test sheet.

As can be seen by the EI's for each curve, all had to be shifted back to the left on the log exposure scale by 1 2/3 to 1 1/3 stop to reflect a Zone I density of 0.1...........just the basic fixed speed point method of determining speed with the ZS. As you can see the target for "N" development times is a Zone VIII density of 1.2 +- 0.05 (indicated by the red dashes above and below each target) to try and develop the negative to a relatively consistent NDR of 1.1 from Zone I to VIII. I found it interesting that the 5.5 min curve reflects EI40 and the 6 min curve reflects EI32, I would've thought it would show the reverse.

And I say with all due respect, there is no need for opinions on flaws associated with how speed is determined using the ZS, it's not my intent to spark a discussion in this thread on what some think is a better way, thank you. I'm just reporting that's how I've done it here and how I've always done it. I can't find any reasons to argue with my results so far.

I look forward to giving these curves their pictorial chances going forward. I'm certainly open to constructive criticism on how better to utilize BT2B as it pertains to these curves or perhaps possible better development time and agitation scenarios with A and B, which I'd be glad to implement at some point in the future. I'm also, intrigued with that idea of having two other bath B mixtures available, one with 7g of sodium metaborate and one with 20g of sodium metaborate for use in dealing with different SBR's using BT2B.


View attachment 388441

I've found TMX is - for me - performing optimally with 5.5 + 5.5 (occasionally 6+6) in BTTB. Not unlike your results. Thanks for graphing it.
 

Alan Johnson

Subscriber
Joined
Nov 16, 2004
Messages
3,221
From Edge of Darkness the main idea of it seemed to be that it can provide printable negatives from scenes of widely varying contrast on the same roll and reduced development of highlights due to minimal agitation in part B.
This cannot be graphed but thanks for the data which is useful if contrast of all scenes is similar.
 
Joined
Jan 28, 2023
Messages
946
Location
Wilammette Valley, Oregon
Format
35mm RF
From Edge of Darkness the main idea of it seemed to be that it can provide printable negatives from scenes of widely varying contrast on the same roll and reduced development of highlights due to minimal agitation in part B.
This cannot be graphed but thanks for the data which is useful if contrast of all scenes is similar.

Well, yes. But.... Regardless of how much agitation is applied in Bath B, the developing agent(s) that soaked into the emulsion will be exhausted quickly in the high density areas. The reduced agitation facilitates edge effects more than anything.
 

Alan Johnson

Subscriber
Joined
Nov 16, 2004
Messages
3,221
Well, yes. But.... Regardless of how much agitation is applied in Bath B, the developing agent(s) that soaked into the emulsion will be exhausted quickly in the high density areas. The reduced agitation facilitates edge effects more than anything.

I found the instructions for the discontinued Emofin, another developer where there is some development in the first bath.
They only mention agitation in both baths at 3sec (rotary processing?) and 1 minute intervals, in agreement with what you say, nothing about minimal agitation.
They give temperature correction factors by which to multiply the time at 20C, 68F.
18C(64F) 1.2, 20C(68F) 1.0....22C(72F) 0.85..... 24C(75F) 0.75....26C(79F) 0.6.
IDK if these factors work with BTTB.
 

snusmumriken

Subscriber
Joined
Jul 22, 2021
Messages
2,353
Location
Salisbury, UK
Format
35mm
I found the instructions for the discontinued Emofin, another developer where there is some development in the first bath.
They only mention agitation in both baths at 3sec (rotary processing?) and 1 minute intervals, in agreement with what you say, nothing about minimal agitation.
They give temperature correction factors by which to multiply the time at 20C, 68F.
18C(64F) 1.2, 20C(68F) 1.0....22C(72F) 0.85..... 24C(75F) 0.75....26C(79F) 0.6.
IDK if these factors work with BTTB.

I think it may be a mistake to believe that edge effects are a reason to use BT2B. Those effects must occur naturally as the developer exhausts in Bath B, and it may well be possible to enhance them through sparing agitation. But I think that is an afterthought. The principle reason to use BT2B, IMHO, is control of extreme highlights (which also means you can have low and high contrast images on the same roll). You still need to expose the shadows adequately, of course.

Emofin got me into 2-bath developers, but with hindsight it was quite a different beast from BT2B. However, any time-temperature chart should serve if you need to change development times for different temperatures. Which reminds me, there is no point in anyone recommending development times for this or that film, without also telling us the temperature at which they were determined, and the agitation regime.
 

Chuck_P

Subscriber
Joined
Feb 2, 2004
Messages
2,369
Location
Kentucky
Format
4x5 Format
The principle reason to use BT2B, IMHO, is control of extreme highlights (which also means you can have low and high contrast images on the same roll). You still need to expose the shadows adequately, of course.

That is exactly why I wanted to get started with mixing my own developer to use with a two-bath developer like BT2B. I didn't anticipate going as far as the plus development times in my curves above but I'll be interested in seeing how they preform pictorially as well.
 

Chuck_P

Subscriber
Joined
Feb 2, 2004
Messages
2,369
Location
Kentucky
Format
4x5 Format
I wanted to show a pictorial result of developing TMX at the arrived at EI of 32 in a very high contrast scene in my living room. The first image is the straight scan from an Epson V700 and the bottom is with some LrC adjustments. I can tell you that there is decent information on the negative by which to work when printing. There's more subtlety of detail in the brightest values of the sheer curtain than what I'm able to bring out here digitally in LrC.

The exposure entered reciprocity territory and I gave 5 sec at f/11. I spot metered the shadow value (EV 4 1/3) on the chair back cushion below the blanket near where it meets the chair arm and placed it on Zone III.........the sheer curtain was bathed in morning sunlight and the brightest highlight on the curtain (EV 13 1/3) fell on Zone XII+. This negative was developed for 4.5 x 4.5 as per the curve above. I think I'm very pleased with this result, at least as it looks here anyway, and imo, there's definitely room for decent contrast manipulation across the whole negative if printing.

I want to give a thanks to @What About Bob for letting me go down this BT2B rabbit hole in his thread that has nothing to do with temperature, thank you.


BTTB #1 straight scan (1100L) sharpen 2 @ 20.jpg



BTTB #1 LrC adj (1100L) sharpen 2 @ 20-3.jpg
 
Last edited:

John Wiegerink

Subscriber
Joined
May 29, 2009
Messages
3,469
Location
Lake Station, MI
Format
Multi Format
Chuck,
The living room shot looks like BTTB (BT2B) did exactly what it is known for. Even the detail in the throw on the sofa looks very good. I bet you could have used a EI of 64 on that shot. I bet that this one would wet print pretty easy also, but I could be wrong.
 
OP
OP
What About Bob

What About Bob

Subscriber
Joined
Aug 23, 2019
Messages
543
Location
Northampton, MA.
Format
Analog
@Chuck_P: Give the 20 grams a try. I attached two samples using 20 grams of metaborate. First image is from Kentmere 400 at EI 320 and the second image from Tri-X at EI 250. Five minutes in both baths.

I haven't yet tried the 7 grams amount. Might benefit more contrasty scenes.
 

Attachments

  • Dumbbell and Dumber.jpg
    Dumbbell and Dumber.jpg
    1.5 MB · Views: 26
  • TMNT Mural.jpg
    TMNT Mural.jpg
    1.3 MB · Views: 27

Chuck_P

Subscriber
Joined
Feb 2, 2004
Messages
2,369
Location
Kentucky
Format
4x5 Format
@Chuck_P: Give the 20 grams a try. I attached two samples using 20 grams of metaborate. First image is from Kentmere 400 at EI 320 and the second image from Tri-X at EI 250. Five minutes in both baths.

I haven't yet tried the 7 grams amount. Might benefit more contrasty scenes.

I may very well try that today but with the 7g of the metaborate for my high contrast scene in my living room, the camera is still in the same position. It's supposed to be partly cloudy here today, I'd like to have the same intensity of light as yesterday if possible.
 

Chuck_P

Subscriber
Joined
Feb 2, 2004
Messages
2,369
Location
Kentucky
Format
4x5 Format
I bet you could have used a EI of 64 on that shot. I bet that this one would wet print pretty easy also, but I could be wrong.

Yes, could very well be. The curve family gives a good representation, imo, of how the film is behaving with BT2B with my dev times and agitation. Some may think it's wasteful and over complicating the process, but I couldn't disagree more. It makes the whole process going forward so much more fluid to me. So deviating from the tested results, as you astutely suggested, will just feel more organized to my way of thinking about it.
 

Milpool

Member
Joined
Jul 9, 2023
Messages
567
Location
n/a
Format
4x5 Format
One thing to keep in mind is the test scene is relatively high-flare, which is both helping emulsion speed (at least from a fixed density criterion perspective) and reducing contrast.
 

Chuck_P

Subscriber
Joined
Feb 2, 2004
Messages
2,369
Location
Kentucky
Format
4x5 Format
One thing to keep in mind is the test scene is relatively high-flare, which is both helping emulsion speed (at least from a fixed density criterion perspective) and reducing contrast.

Absolutely, thank you. I know some image flare is present and it's effect but I don't try to quantify it in the curves, it's something to be aware of, certainly. My simplistic take on it is to be thankful when it becomes helpful and to just print through it when it's not.
 

Chuck_P

Subscriber
Joined
Feb 2, 2004
Messages
2,369
Location
Kentucky
Format
4x5 Format
Upon @What About Bob 's suggestion, this last image I'm posting was developed using bath B with 7 grams of metaborate for the high contrast scene in my living room. It was exposed today with, luckily, about the same lighting conditions, perhaps a bit stronger in this instance because the shadow placement (Zone III) reading with EV 4 2/3 was 1/3 stronger than the Zone III placement yesterday. The high value reading was also 1/3 stronger at EV 13 2/3.

The first is the straight scan and the second has some contrast manipulations done in LrC. The sheer curtain was easier to work with and it clearly contains more separation separation throughout when seen on the negative and the information is there to work with. The low values, imo, are well supported. For consistancy I developed the same time as yesterday at 4.5 x 4.5 minutes. I'm very pleased with both negatives. The highest value in the curtain was probably still just a bit too strong for the process, but I will print it when I can get some more paper, perhaps post it for comparison to what I did in LrC.


BTTB #2 7g (1100L) sharpen 2 @ 22.jpg



BTTB #2 7g (1100L) sharpen 2 @ 22_final.jpg
 
Last edited:

John Wiegerink

Subscriber
Joined
May 29, 2009
Messages
3,469
Location
Lake Station, MI
Format
Multi Format
Chuck,
Looks good! With 4X5, different strength second baths should work great and actually make life pretty simple as far as Zone System work goes. I think Adam's had a film developer something like this. I know he had a 130 style paper developer that operated on the same principle and I have used that before.
 

Chuck_P

Subscriber
Joined
Feb 2, 2004
Messages
2,369
Location
Kentucky
Format
4x5 Format
Chuck, Looks good! With 4X5, different strength second baths should work great and actually make life pretty simple as far as Zone System work goes. I think Adam's had a film developer something like this. I know he had a 130 style paper developer that operated on the same principle and I have used that before.

Thanks, I'm quite please so far, the actual printing of the negative may be the best test probably, but I have no paper at the moment. I think that may be the Ansco 130 paper developer, not sure..........but undoubtedly that was used with papers no longer available.
 

John Wiegerink

Subscriber
Joined
May 29, 2009
Messages
3,469
Location
Lake Station, MI
Format
Multi Format
Thanks, I'm quite please so far, the actual printing of the negative may be the best test probably, but I have no paper at the moment. I think that may be the Ansco 130 paper developer, not sure..........but undoubtedly that was used with papers no longer available.
Yes, but Ansco/Agfa 130 is still used today even for VC papers. I like it for its shelf life and the way it holds up in an open tray. I was thinking it was Adam's who teaked the 130 developer to a two-part with different strength carbonate solutions in a second bath for slight contrast control. Of course this 75 year old mind isn't as sharp as it used to be and I could be wrong on that one. I'm going to use BTTB to develop a couple of sheets of Shanghai GP3 to see if it stored well and to test an old uncoated Angolan 90mm 6.8 against my newly arrived coated one. We'll see how it goes.
 

Chuck_P

Subscriber
Joined
Feb 2, 2004
Messages
2,369
Location
Kentucky
Format
4x5 Format
Yes, but Ansco/Agfa 130 is still used today even for VC papers.

Thank you..........I've been an Ilford guy for years and probably need to branch out as well on some different papers, but it gets expensive.
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom