So I appear to be experiencing a film-developing problem as evidenced by the dark motley area on the left side of the attached image (a self portrait!). This appears in about half of the images on that roll.
I have uploaded the images from this roll to an album on my flickr site if you want to see some of the other images from this roll.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/feberdt/sets/72157645519120541/Here are the particulars:
-Camera: Minolta Autocord (other films from this camera have been ok)
-Film: Tmax 400 shot at 400 ISO
-Tank: single MF stainless steel tank, 350 ml of solution
-Developer: HC 110 dilution H (1:63)
-Time: 10 min
-Agitation: 30 seconds continuous at beginning and end, four tank rotations every intervening minute
The poorly developed area is along the numbered side of the film. So the problem is at either at the top or bottom of the developing tank.
I suspect the problem has to do with the developer concentration and/or the agitation routine. I have used HC 110 before but never with this dilution or agitation scheme.
The decision to try this approach came from a post on APUG:
"….Try the unofficial Dilution H. It's just half the solution and double the time for Dilution B. Works great for 35mm and 120 Tri-X. I usually develop for about 10 minutes, give or take depending on lighting and subject contrast and desired contrast in the negatives…"
I guess this was bad advice……
Ok now to show my ignorance. I am still relatively new at developing film. Since the problem area is darker than in should have been, does that mean it is under-developed (too little agitation) or over-developed (too much agitation).
I prefer to use either Rodinal or HC110 developer because they can be mixed from a liquid that can be stored for a long time. Which is the better developer to use with Tmax400 and what would be a good dilution and development scheme?
Thanks for the help.
Minolta Autocord-3 by
Frank Gab&Tor, on Flickr