![]() Not saying you should but in general the safest to have reproductable results is to do the same workflow everytime. I usually develop two films at a time for 35mm, or two times one 120 in the same session, as my tank is 0.5l, so if i do 1x120 and then the next time 2x35mm, i'm at roll 2 and 3, and while you can probably use an intermediate time, i prefer to keep it straight. ( There are tanks that can hold one, two, four or more films, it's really about the quantity of cheminals vs surface treated). Easy mixing due to adjusted liquid concentrate parts. Tetenal Colortec C-41 Rapid 2 Bath Color Negative Developing Kit has been specially designed for. Just, the more times you use it, the more times it comes in contact with air etc, it might degrade faster, but the 16 films per liter is a bit conservative amount, so you should be fine. TETENAL chemicals for RA-4, C-41, E-6 and B/W ensure a particularly high quality of workmanship and enable safe, user-friendly handling - they stand for an optimal combination of cost-effectiveness and compliance with ecological requirements. Processing kit consisting of colour developer, bleach fix plus stabilizer for C-41 compatible processing of all colour negative films. Colortec - the best available technology for color chemicals. Manual sais 2 films for 0.5l, 4 films per 1 l per time increase. If you use 24 exp films, you might have to recalculate. (135-36 being 35mm film with 36 exposures, just in case. In the beginning it says yield(total amount of films for the entire pack) for both 135 and 120 to be the same amount of rolls, so they count the same. ![]() 35mm and 120 film are the same surface, each count for 1 film.
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