Jim, no densitomoeter will compensate for exhausted developer. Eric Goldstein -- On 3/5/08, Jim Brick <jim@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Probably true for some B&W combos, ie; Xtol 1:3, but I've never had > that problem. D76 1:1, diXactol, Rodinal, etc. But I also determined > my development times by densitometer tests, which would would sort of > negate, for the most part, the developer exhaustion problem. > > > On Mar 5, 2008, at 8:46 AM, slobodan dimitrov wrote: > > > There's not enough chemistry for neg. area in those smaller ones. > > Photo Impact, at the Hollywood location, develops BW film as you > > would movie film. > > A point they stress for 220, which can exhaust the developer very > > quickly in a small container. > > s.d. > > > > --- > Rollei List > > - Post to rollei_list@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > > - Subscribe at rollei_list-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with 'subscribe' > in the subject field OR by logging into www.freelists.org > > - Unsubscribe at rollei_list-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with > 'unsubscribe' in the subject field OR by logging into www.freelists.org > > - Online, searchable archives are available at > //www.freelists.org/archives/rollei_list > > --- Rollei List - Post to rollei_list@xxxxxxxxxxxxx - Subscribe at rollei_list-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with 'subscribe' in the subject field OR by logging into www.freelists.org - Unsubscribe at rollei_list-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with 'unsubscribe' in the subject field OR by logging into www.freelists.org - Online, searchable archives are available at //www.freelists.org/archives/rollei_list