Ilford Delta 100 Black and White Film Review | All About Film

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

I often ask, when making these videos, ‘what makes a good film?’ Or, at least, some variation on that question. Often, I ask if this film I’m working with is a good film. We can acknowledge that, with some infrequent exceptions, film today is very good. That, frankly, blows my mind since the industry has been almost twenty years with far less new engineering and research talent influx than prior to digital. So that we have good films at all speaks quite highly of the talented engineers and chemists involved with film today.
The best evidence of that is in the near-uniform quality of black and white 100 ISO film stocks. Literally none of the 100-ISO black and white films being made today are bad, or even poor, or even below-average compared to historic films. Even the worst of them, whatever that film is, performs better than very many historic films. But here’s the thing, Delta 100, it is not the worst of them.
So what is it that makes modern 100 ISO black and white films good? They perform well, meaning they excel in the important technical ways - consistency; uniformity across batches; performance and image characteristics that yield pleasing images; and an ability to be used flexibly across settings, conditions, and subjects to capture captivating images. Delta 100 ticks all those boxes. More than that, I know of no one who has used Delta 100 and come away from the experience with it being anything less than a favorite film. And that, I argue, is because in every possible way that a 100 ISO film could be measured, barring perhaps cost, Delta 100 meets or beats all the competitors. And yes, this is, insofar as I know, the single-best in-production 100 ISO black and white film. Today, and frankly any day. If I met a time traveler from the future who came back just to buy Delta 100 because no better 100 ISO black and white film exists in the future, I’d believe them. I can think of no way to improve this film class beyond what Delta 100 today does.
I think the highest praise that I can pay Delta 100 is that it is, in every format, the single-best 100 ISO black and white film. And its latitude to be pushed up to 400 ISO quite easily and pulled to as slow as 10 ISO quite easily makes it a fantastic all-around film, too. And one quick thing, when I say it can be pushed to 400 ISO what I mean is that at 400 ISO Delta 100 performs better than very many native 400 ISO black and white films being made today. So in my frame of reference, Delta 100 is not simply the best 100 ISO black and white film being made today or ever, it is the best black and white film of any ISO being made today or ever.
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Index:
0:00 - Intro
0:10 - Skip Intro
0:57 - Ilford Delta 100 Best Tips, Tricks, & Practices
5:09 - Ilford Delta 100 Subjective Characteristics
10:00 - Ilford Delta 100 Spectral Sensitivity
15:30 - Ilford Delta 100 Filter Performance
18:17 - Ilford Delta 100 Reciprocity Failure
20:54 - Ilford Delta 100 Development Latitude
22:44 - Ilford Delta 100 Recommended Developers
25:10 - Ilford Delta 100 Developers to Avoid
26:44 - Ilford Delta 100 Closing Narrative
Developer Index:
0:20 - Ilford Delta 100 in XTOL 1+3, 100 ISO, 15:30
1:05 - Ilford Delta 100 in Rodinal 1+100, 100 ISO, 70:00 (stand developed)
1:51 - Ilford Delta 100 in Fomadon LQP 1+10, 100 ISO, 8:00
2:46 - Ilford Delta 100 in HC-110 1+119, 100 ISO, 24:00
3:09 - Ilford Delta 100 in HC-110 1+31, 100 ISO, 6:00
5:16 - Ilford Delta 100 in D-76 1+3, 100 ISO, 20:00
6:20 - Ilford Delta 100 in D-76 1+3, 50 ISO, 15:00
7:11 - Ilford Delta 100 in D-76 1+3, 400 ISO, 12:00
7:51 - Ilford Delta 100 in RPX-D 1+19, 100 ISO, 7:00
8:55 - Ilford Delta 100 in Ilfosol 3 1+9, 100 ISO, 11:00
13:12 - Ilford Delta 100 in D-76 Stock, 100 ISO, 8:30
14:30 - Ilford Delta 100 in LegacyPro Mic-X 1+3, 25 ISO, Unknown Time
14:49 - Ilford Delta 100 in LegacyPro Mic-X 1+3, 100 ISO, 22:00
19:34 - Ilford Delta 100 in Rodinal 1+50, 400 ISO, 23:00
20:20 - Ilford Delta 100 in Rodinal 1+50, 100 ISO, 14:00
21:02 - Ilford Delta 100 in HC-110 1+47, 50 ISO, 5:30
22:52 - Ilford Delta 100 in Ilfosol 3 1+14, 100 ISO, 7:30
25:19 - Ilford Delta 100 in DK-50 1+3, 100 ISO, 10:30
26:52 - Ilford Delta 100 in D-76 1+1, 100 ISO, 11:00
29:28 - Ilford Delta 100 in D-76 1+1, 10 ISO, 4:30
30:09 - Ilford Delta 100 in TMax Developer 1+4, 100 ISO, 7:00
References:
www.ilfordphoto.com/amfile/fi...
www.digitaltruth.com/devchart...
"VHS Hero" by Lofive, "Parallax" by Luwaks, "The Road (Instrumental Version)" by Origo, "Sweet Despair" by Dream Cave, "Rose in the Garden (Instrumental Version) by Cody Francis, "Highway Blues" by Henrik Andersson, and "Vista" by Dye O used under active license from Epidemic Sound at the time of this video's upload.

Пікірлер: 75

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms2512 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful presentation and review of this film. Also the foregrounds and backgrounds and skies are so well balanced in so many of your photographs. Terrific work and effort. Thank you. RS. Canada.

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Richard!

  • @bish5196
    @bish51962 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for another great video David! Ive always appreciated your likeness to provide in depth technical analysis of a film stock, developing methods, and lastly anecdotal experience. Truly gives an insightful and informative review and makes this series shine on your channel.

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Bish!

  • @jimpurcell
    @jimpurcell2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks, I have been waiting/hoping for this video. You truly help us understand our films better!!!

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Jim!

  • @tgchism
    @tgchism Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for a great very detailed video!! You truly have me excited about trying this film. I shot film from high school in the early 80's I started developing my own B&W film and prints in the mid 80's and worked in a photo lab in there late 80's. I was slow to switch to digital because I feared not having a negatives to hold onto instead if digital files which still seem too easy to loose comparatively. I eventually settled into Sony digital cameras starting with the A6000. One of the nice thing about Sony cameras is the ease that you can mount just about any lens from any manufacture with the right adaptor. This opened a whole new experience of trying several classic lenses on the A6000. Collecting classic lenses eventually led me back to fun-frame photography and the Sony A7III. For the first year or so owning the camera I literally only had manual lenses to use on it. During my time collecting classic lenses to use, I acquired several older 35mm film cameras in the process. I really didn't have planned usage for them until I started to scan my old library of film. Seeing the quality of the scans from my film has rekindled my interest in shooting film again. To that end I purchased 4 35mm rolls of Delta 100. I also purchased Ifosal-3 developer for the process. That's what led me to your video. I wanted to see which times I wanted to use and if I had actually picked up the right developer for the job. I will certainly use the time and dilutions you mention for the film. I'm also planning on introducing my youngest son to the film shooting and developing process. He ended up with my Sony A6000 camera and has really taken to photography. This will be fun because he has never shot anything but digital. Thank you again for all the wonderful information!

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @samue1991
    @samue19912 жыл бұрын

    I've picked up several rolls of this since I watched this video and just yesterday got the absolute sharpest and clearest 35mm photos I've ever taken. I'm blown away by the ifosol and delta 100 combo, it'll be a staple for me for sure. Thanks for the video!!

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @nicovincenti9
    @nicovincenti92 жыл бұрын

    Once again, fantastic video as always, David!.

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Agustin!

  • @liveinaweorg
    @liveinaweorg2 жыл бұрын

    Timely. I have my first roll of Delta 100 in my Mamiya C3 and I'm planning to develop it at home (it'll be my fifth roll developed at home). Thanks Dave.

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Nice! That sounds like an awesome combo.

  • @petervanorsouw2858
    @petervanorsouw28582 жыл бұрын

    Hi David, Another great review 👍 Ilford advise Perceptol with Delta 100 at ISO 100 is a nice combination and I agree. (Also as a side note Delta 400 at ISO 320 in Perceptol 1+1 is also really worth the effort.) Maybe a future review of Perceptol with various films would be of interest. I'm not sure about a film being the best. FP4+ with its latitude or HP5+ for grain, as an example. I'd say it is horses for courses. My favorite films at the moment is 100 TMAX, FP4+ and HP5+ And you have made some wonderful reviews with those films. Thank you for those programs as well👍

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you! I have thought a LOT about developer reviews. I have an outline, format, and series name already developed. The hurdle is time.

  • @petervanorsouw2858

    @petervanorsouw2858

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@DavidHancock yes, time a real asset these days. You do put so much effort into your programs. Thanks for that. Nice pun, I also hope that you can Develop more of your expertise with all types of film photographery.

  • @jw48335
    @jw483352 жыл бұрын

    Another fantastic installment! I will say the gap of Xtol/DD-X stuck out to me though. DD-X occupies 6/7 slots in the Ilford liquid sheet. I find Xtol 1+3 yields very similar results to DD-X 1+4. It is so similar that I don't use DD-X anymore as Xtol is cheaper 1-shot and yields slightly less grain on D3200. A few years ago I even took D100 to 800 using DD-X 1+9 stand for 75 minutes with solid results. It was an entertaining accident:) Cheers!

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you and yes, XTOL is a glaring hole here, solely because I didn't have a 5L container for it (I do now.) It was always a pain for me to use because I calculate all my stock for Kodak solutions in gallons.

  • @amirhoseinamini9220
    @amirhoseinamini92202 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the great video! I agree, Delta 100 is a magical film and my favourite!

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @geophizz
    @geophizz2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for confirming my faith in Delta 100!

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @brycepinson8641
    @brycepinson86412 жыл бұрын

    These videos are the best. I've been using Delta 100 as my go-to black and white for 4x5 for several years now. I have to say its really neat to hear someone else who has more experience than me, confirm my findings. I've found it remarkably flexible, able to give everything from punchy contrast to wide latitude depending on exposure and development... Interestingly I have found that the reciprocity characteristics of this film are far better than advertised. I have been using some numbers found on an online forum that go like 4sec->4.5sec, 8sec->9sec, 15sec->19sec, 30sec->41sec. These are much lower numbers than Ilford gives. I've used them and not had any issue.

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Bryce! Ilford always errs on the side of caution. I would expect following lower vs. Ilford reciprocity numbers will definitely yield usable results, though perhaps a hair less dense. Plus, chemistry concentration (which can be affected by mis-prints on measuring cylinders) or efficacy (which can be affected by the water source used for mixing chemistry) can alter results. It's always best to use guides like the data sheets and findings like my videos as a starting point and build out from there.

  • @brycepinson8641

    @brycepinson8641

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@DavidHancock thank you for the reply. Very good points. It is true that I have real way to measure density other than to look at my results and say “looks good to me”… which is hardly scientific.

  • @gollariddhi
    @gollariddhi2 жыл бұрын

    Fantastic work, David. Many thanks for the huge work you put into every review. I do have a question, you've noted Delta 100 at ASA 100 in D-76 + 3 for 20/22 minutes & at ASA 400 for 12 minutes. Isn’t pushing the film requires to be developed for a longer period of time than box speed?

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Good catch and you definitely should. I just drabbed the Massive Development Chart times for these. It's all over the place on those. No idea where the discrepancy comes from. Shooting at 50 with a D-76+3 developing time also has a weird time. I wonder if the MDC time for 400 is supposed to be 32 minutes.

  • @gollariddhi

    @gollariddhi

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@DavidHancock I was wondering the same. Definitely going to push it to 400 in HC 110 next week!

  • @evanduffy1015
    @evanduffy10152 жыл бұрын

    Wow that is some high praise, I definitely need to give this a try! I tried delta 400 a while ago and was not impressed since its almost $4 more than HP5 where I buy film and didn't give much better results. Thanks for these great deep dives!

  • @FlosBlog

    @FlosBlog

    2 жыл бұрын

    Are you in the us? Those films all cost the same in Germany (and about 1-2€ less then the Kodak products)

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you! I'm not nearly as much of a fan of Delta 400 as I am of 100. It's a fine film, but my results from it so far haven't been as good as TMax 400 and HP5+.

  • @yakovkhalip9714
    @yakovkhalip97149 ай бұрын

    interesting tip about green filter you mentioned ! I have to try it - ! so it's good only with this film or in general with any panchromatic b-w ? I also tried few months ago Ilford Ortho-80, which must be sensitive only in green and blue part ... It's a nice film with relatevely big and cosy grain and nice halftones ))

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank you! So the filters will work differently with different films based on a number of factors: 1- The specific light wave transmission of the green filter (in general, more-expensive filters filter out non-green and non-green-adjacent light whereas cheaper ones just kinda look green to our eyes.) 2- The specific spectral sensitivity of the film stock being used (Some good filters may have spectral sensitivity data available and comparing that to a film can help provide an idea of the effect the filter has.) 3- The light source used to illuminate the image. If, as an example, you're in a studio setting with a strongly orange tungsten light, then there may be nearly zero green in the light reaching your film and that would mean that the green filter eliminates all light reaching your film, conversely outside or artificial full-spectrum light will include green wavelengths.

  • @yakovkhalip9714

    @yakovkhalip9714

    9 ай бұрын

    @@DavidHancock I see, interesting ! I use Cokin square filters) tried Red with Kodak TMAX400 and Ilford PAN400)

  • @jb-xc4oh
    @jb-xc4oh25 күн бұрын

    Its been my go to film for well over 20 years, I do use it on 4x5 and 8x10 formats.

  • @Shanesshiit
    @Shanesshiit2 жыл бұрын

    I agree! It's a main stay in my bulk roller, it's in there right now, has been for years...

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Definitely my favorite black and white film.

  • @Shanesshiit

    @Shanesshiit

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@DavidHancock I like Pan F quite a bit also, but for some reason it's not common here in Canada, at least not in bulk. I'm not sure why Delta 100 is not more popular, considering I can get it at my local drug store..

  • @emotown1
    @emotown1 Жыл бұрын

    I dev the stuff in Ilford HC at 1:50 dilution, semi-stand. Technically I'm probably devving it to iso160, but I shoot at box-speed. That's more because I hate accidental under-exposure (easily done), so over-developing slightly covers my ass a bit there. I try for a slight "compensating" effect with the 1-50 dilution and semi stand method - I've noticed an inherent tendency of the Delta films to build up highlight density very harshly (no gentle roll-off like with FP4+, for example) which makes the whites look overly "radioactive" and slightly washed out, and this seems to be true whatever developer you use (although apparently Xtol and DDX help in this regard). So any slight compensating effect I'm getting with HC will theoretically create more of a "roll-off" in the highlights. (I'm almost always burning in highlight detail in the darkroom anyway - once burned in, this film gives good highlights) So, that seems to work! HC is a great one-shot universal developer - kind of a half-way hotel between D76 and Rodinal in terms of accutance and how it handles grain. I have to say one thing about Delta 100: if you like a warm tonality this film cannot be beat. It sometimes looks like the prints have been mildly toned, it's that warm. And I don't really buy into this whole idea that different developers "dramatically" change how a film "looks" (accutance and apparent graininess being the obvious exceptions}. I can often recognize what films prints were made from, regardless of what they were souped in. TriX always looks like TriX, whether it's grain is D76-silky or Rodinal-was-this-taken-in-a-blizzard :) People get way too obsessed with trying to find that Eureka moment when they hit on the "perfect" film/dev combo - it's like that pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, a mirage. Just stick to what you know works well enough and get good at it - Delta 100 will still look like Delta 100.

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @emotown1

    @emotown1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DavidHancock You are welcome, and thank you for a very involved analysis!

  • @ivaa7777JAWA
    @ivaa7777JAWA Жыл бұрын

    Great video

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @senseofeverthing
    @senseofeverthing2 жыл бұрын

    Have you tried the new Across II? I love the tonality of the film and started to shift more and more form Delta 100 towards Across II. Maybe you could try a direct comparison?

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    I have tried it. I haven't really ventured into direct film comparisons yet but Across II is on the list of films that I'm shooting this year for this series.

  • @studiosnch
    @studiosnch2 жыл бұрын

    Just bought a 10-pack of Delta 100 because of this video. Will definitely compare this with my aboslute standard for ISO 100 films, ADOX CHS 100 II. And hearing that Ilfosol works best with this film gives me promise, as this developer is most available here.

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Nice! I would think you'll be happy.

  • @studiosnch

    @studiosnch

    2 жыл бұрын

    Coming back now to you after shooting my first Delta 100 roll ever. What you all said is truth. I think I now have a new "baseline" film for anything. And yes I souped it in Ilfosol 1+14 at 5m 25s (at 24 degrees because I was in a rush when I developed my film). The film and developer are just, made for each other. A true example of a "one true pair". So yes, Ilford Delta 100 IS the best film ever made. Period.

  • @steveb7477
    @steveb7477 Жыл бұрын

    So, I have a question.... You show a developer that you used and your comments about it. Are the pictures following the developer that you mentioned made with that developer? Either I missed you explaining that or you didn't state it. thanks.

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, the photos that follow each developer breaker screen were developed in that specific combo until the next developer screen arrives.

  • @TrashTheLens
    @TrashTheLens2 жыл бұрын

    David, what is Fomadon LQP? As far as I know, and what Foma's webpage says, they make LQN (liquid, normal working PQ developer) and LQR (liquid, contrast-working PQ dev) and P (powder, D76-like). Did you mix LQN with LQR and ended up with something alphabetically in between? :)

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Pretty sure it's LQR but forgetting to write the"R's" leg on my darkroom notes and the error perpetuating endlessly.

  • @TrashTheLens

    @TrashTheLens

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@DavidHancock Gotcha! Thanks.

  • @GreggObst
    @GreggObst2 жыл бұрын

    Delta 100 in 120, 4x5 and 5x7 is sensational in Pyrocat HD or MC at 1:1:100 with highlight detail preservation in things like bright clouds being a key advantage.

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you! I have always heard good things about Pyro but haven't ever gotten to try it.

  • @rickylee1894
    @rickylee18942 жыл бұрын

    Hi thanks for your video. Always watch and enjoyed your video. Want to get your opinion on Illford FP4 Plus 120 film. Recently I shot 2 rolls and self-developed them. Some of the shots on one roll have smudges like scratches and another roll all have the same issues. This is similar to HP5 plus which I encountered previously and wrote to the company. This time I wrote to them and didn’t receive any response from them. It seemed like backing paper issues? For storage I followed their recommendation to store in freezer and let them reach room temperature before using them. By the way these 2 rolls have expiry Jun 2023. Would appreciate your help.

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Can you drop me an Instagram message with a link to some scans? It might help to see them.

  • @rickylee1894

    @rickylee1894

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@DavidHancock I don’t have Instagram. Furthermore they are personal photos, I do not wish to share them widely. Is it possible to send them to you via your personal email etc? Thanks and really appreciate your reply.

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@rickylee1894 You can reach me at my Proton account, DHCPC@protonmail.com

  • @terrywbreedlove
    @terrywbreedlove2 жыл бұрын

    I have shot a little Delta 100 in 35mm 120 and a few sheets of 4x5. I still have most of the 4x5 Box to work through. I shot it at 100 and develop using D76. I have yet to shoot with a filter but will be trying a Red. Reciprocity is not as good as Tmax 100 and actually I prefer the look of Tmax. But i want to switch over to Ilford and will keep trying

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    I liked this with a red filter a lot. It's definitely worth trying it on 4X5 with red.

  • @Emma-zk6it
    @Emma-zk6it2 жыл бұрын

    I can't decide which one is my favorite if delta 100 or acros II . they both render beautiful images

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    I still lean toward Delta 100, but I'm also working on the Acros II AAF video, so I'll know more next year on that.

  • @mathewrupp8568
    @mathewrupp85682 жыл бұрын

    My favorite film is TMax 100 and would be willing to switch to Delta, however they raised the price as high as Tmax. With the price of everything going up I don't find myself paying for over priced film. My wife just got back from the store, she picked up a dozen eggs for over $5.00 we used to get them on sell for 88 cents. I have a couple of cameras that shoot 6x9, they just collect dust if I shoot medium format at all it's 6x4.5. My digital camera is getting a lot more use, the only way prices will come down is if people stop shooting it.

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    I hear you on prices. We only get good prices on eggs when we see them for sale at the farms we pass on hikes (I keep my eyes peeled for EGGS signs on the dirt roads.) I, too, am shooting more digital for the same reason. Film cost is making me think about other ways to make these videos (maybe just longer displays for each photo.)

  • @gavinjenkins899
    @gavinjenkins8992 ай бұрын

    I know a reason why you might not like it at medium format: You still want to shoot medium format handheld, but the lenses are much slower than available in 35mm. 35mm has fast lenses, so 100 ISO is no problem, and large format is on a tripod (unless you use speed graphics), so 100 ISO is no problem, but medium is slow and not on a tripod, so it starts to be a problem.

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 ай бұрын

    Good point and observation. Thank you!

  • @MidwestBriar
    @MidwestBriar Жыл бұрын

    20:00 Hey I have that camera 😃

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    Жыл бұрын

    Nice! It's a great camera.

  • @user-ti9zc1xv2b
    @user-ti9zc1xv2b2 жыл бұрын

    I could never like delta 100, too flat, love fp4

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Nothing wrong with FP4+, either.

  • @ZommBleed
    @ZommBleed2 жыл бұрын

    If you had images of Sasquatch I'd believe these photos were real. You didn't even have a blurry picture of Bigfoot, much less coffee. I rate this video as a B-minus. Next time try a Canon 5D Mk. ii with Ilford 100. Your images will turn out much better.

  • @DavidHancock

    @DavidHancock

    2 жыл бұрын

    I do like to just glue a bit of film onto an image sensor and use my digitals that way.

  • @ZommBleed

    @ZommBleed

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@DavidHancock It works. Positive print paper does ok, too.

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