Using Expired Tri X

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Mathew
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Hi all, I have been given 2 rolls of Tri X 400 (exp 2010) and 4 rolls of Tri X 320 (exp 2011) and I don't think that they have been refrigerated. How would you choose to expose them? I've seen some suggestions online that Tri X holds up well and that it should just be shot at box speed whereas others recommend the usual +1 stop exposure. Some folks even reckon that it benefits from a little compensation but not the full +1 stop, more like a half stop. I'm going to use it in my RZ67 so I won't have many shots to experiment/ bracket with.

Thanks for your help - Mat.
 
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Thanks Fishy, I didn't realise that it was +1 stop per 2 decades. I might try a half stop over exposure in that case.

I know that the 400 should be more forgiving than the 320 professional so I'll start with that and see how it turns out.
 
2010 and 2011? That is new film! I would shoot at box speed and develop normally. Should there be any degradation of the film (unlikely) you would still be within the latitude of the film.
 
I recently burned a roll of 2014 Tri-X 400 and two rolls of Ilford's glorious 50ISO PanF.

Personally I would always over-expose B&W film by at least a stop - in date or otherwise.

A thicker negative (within limits!) is simply more pleasing and effective for me personally.

In Sunny f/16 conditions I do find that blue skies wash out a bit but could not be bothered to try yellow or red filters yet.

I do tend to expose more critically and would often do 4 or 5 exposures where 2 or 3 might have worked.

My 2c worth.
 
I know that the 400 should be more forgiving than the 320 professional so I'll start with that and see how it turns out.

I got the impression from somewhere that these were the same film, just more accurately rated at 320 for the pros... can you still get Tri-X 320?
 
I got the impression from somewhere that these were the same film, just more accurately rated at 320 for the pros... can you still get Tri-X 320?
I don't know that much about them, only what I've read online. As far as I know the 320 txp is no longer produced, only the standard Tri-X 400. Comments online suggested that the 320 had less exposure latitude and gave smoother tones with slightly lower contrast.
 
I don't know that much about them, only what I've read online. As far as I know the 320 txp is no longer produced, only the standard Tri-X 400. Comments online suggested that the 320 had less exposure latitude and gave smoother tones with slightly lower contrast.

Apparently Tri-X 320 is still produced, for 4*5 and 5*7 sheet sizes, and is indeed a different film. Took me to the Tri-X data sheet, where the reciprocity graph has gobbledegook on the axes! The perils of publishing PDFs without thinking about fonts... but that's another story (http://imaging.kodakalaris.com/sites/prod/files/files/resources/f4017_TriX.pdf page 2).
 
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