I've just loaded 6 acros 100's in to my new combiplan tank (thanks Mr Owen) ready to develop tomorrow. I haven't developed film in over ten years (back in the days of college and more hair

Thanks
Sean
Since I would only be developing at 20°, I find that, by starting out with the the chemistry at around 21°, there really isn't a problem unless the room temperature is excessively cold or hot.gsphoto wrote:Sorry to Hijack your post but do you have any trouble keeping the temperature constant or do you use a water bath Joanna.
Is that 6:45 minutes in pure stock or diluted 1+1?, for some reason my computer wont download PDF's todayjohn shiell wrote:Hi Sean, according to the Ilford PDF the developing time for Fuji acros 100 is 6:45 minutes @ 20 degrees. You can look it up on their website for confirmation. Agitate for the first 5 seconds and there after every 30 seconds. Good luck and look forward to seeing the results.
John
Take a look at the Ilford site http://www.ilfordphoto.com/products/pro ... Developers# and download the datasheet for ID-11 http://www.ilfordphoto.com/download.asp ... 182416.pdf. You should find that you can can develop up to 10 rolls of 135-36 film, that is, 40 sheets of 4x5. But if you look at the datasheet, you will see that they recommend increasing the development time by 10% after each 135-36 film, but I would think you could easily get away with after every 6 sheetsSean Lewis wrote:God that was hairybut they look o.k. so far. Thanks very much for your help and advice. One more thing though, can you use the developer twice or is it a one shot then throw away job?