xtol121
Subscriber
At the risk of being difficult....
When I look at the photo of your nearly blank negatives, I see un-evenness that, at least in par could only reasonably result from un-evenness of exposure.
This is the photo I mean:
View attachment 278745
Note that the vertical areas of reduced density are adjacent to the space between the frames, and only there - not repeated anywhere in the middle of the frames.
I don't believe that is un-evenness which is development related, because I don't believe that there is any way that flow of developer could be affected by the location of the space between the frame.
I agree that the artifacts along the top could be due to development issues, but I find the narrow line along the top edge of the rebate to be interesting. That looks to me to be either an un-fixed area, or an area that has been light struck.
@MattKing The vertical areas on the left/right edges with reduced density was most likely vignetting caused by shooting my 28mm Elmarit-M at f2.8. Won't debate that! I also don't have any of my other test rolls from different cameras/lenses available anymore to confirm. But the top artifacts are absolutely development related and only happen in the Jobo. The narrow line is from the film sitting tightly on the reel and happens frequently when using stainless steel reels in my experience, Jobo or not. I did try using plastic reels as well and the uneven development still occurred.
@Adrian Bacon I believe the CPE-3 runs at 70rpm. It rotates in both directions and there is unfortunately no setting to change that. The CPE-3 is very simple, has an on/off dial, a temp dial, and a rotation on/off dial, and that's it
Maybe next time I have my Jobo set up and I feel like wasting time and film we can run the gamut and I'll livestream me shooting test rolls on different cameras and processing it every which way possible (described in my original post) to try and find out why I've been cursed with uneven development with black and white film on my Jobo. But that probably won't happen, I don't see myself using the Jobo for black and white and that's fine. Maybe there was truth to the Darkroom Cookbook not recommending Jobo for black and white?