| Developer | Dilution | 70 F | 75 F | 85 F |
| Kodak's Xtol | (From Stock) 1:1 1:2 1:3 | 8.25 min. 11.5 min. 15.5 min. | 7.0 min. 9.0 min. 12.25 min. | 5.0 min. 7.5 min. 10.0 min. |
| Agfa's Rodinal | 1:50 1:75 1:100 | |||
| Kodak's HC110 | B (1:7) E (1:11) F (1:19 | |||
| Kodak's T-Max Developer | 1:4 1:7 1:9 | 6.5 10 14 | ||
| A totally different type of B&W film. This film is pretty hard to describe and even harder not to ! It can be grainy and low-contrast , or high contrast with grain nearly equal to 400 speed films. Either way it is incredibly sharp. Its speed can be varied to alter the final image contrast through development which gives it a fleibility that can be pretty hard to utilize unless your a devotee of this film. The only drawback is it's special requirements for loading and unloading as well as it's sensitivity to stray infra-red radiation while it isn't in either the camera or it's shipping canister. Since it isn't as sensitive to visible light as it is to infra-red the lens must be refocused to bring the infra-red into focus. Even so I recommend a small aperture while using this film. At least one roll should be tried before shooting any images that can not be reshot. Perhaps after several rolls you find you can depend on your results. But then perhaps not ! | ||||