# 21 Microphen-like developer
from Steve Anchell's book:
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Water (125F) 750 ml
Sulfite 100 g
Hydroquinone 5 g
Borax 3 g
Boric Acid 3.5 g
Potassium Bromide 1 g
Phenidone 0.2 g
WTM 1 l
The Microphen-like developer resembles buffered D-76 using phenidone
equivalent to approx. 1/10 the weight of metol, and bromide to decrease
phenidone induced fog. I'm not sure how Farber arrived at the Acufine
formulation - in some respects it resembles a PQ version of DK50 1:1
with more sulfite, but not enough to result in a solvent effect
promoting fuzzy filament growth.
I haven't done side-by-side comparisons of Acufine and Microphen, but
you would be hard pressed to find anything which was the equal of
Microphen with respect to speed, fine grain, sharpness and overall tonal
balance.
Dan reopened this old thread yesterday or I'd not have noticed it.
The Formula in the Darkroom Cookbook for a Microphen Type developer is wrong. In fact Tom Hoskinson has already posted ID-68 which is the Microphen Type Developer. ID-68 is interchangeable with Microphen, as is the replenisher.
The formula Anchell lists is as has been mention similar to D76/ID11 and is in fact a PQ variant.
Ilford also published another Fine Grain PQ formula in 1954
Fine grain developer for plates and films
Sodium Sulphite (anhyd) 100 g
Hydroquinone 5 g
Borax 2 g
Boric Acid 1 g
Potassium Bromide 1 g
Phenidone 0.2 g
Water to make 1 litre
Development time: 7-11 minutes at 68° F.
This developer has characteristics approximating to those of Ilford ID-ll, but shows less change in activity during use.
These are Ilford's own comments from the 1954 British Journal Photographic Almanac
Both these formulae are forerunners of Microphen.
Tom Hopkinson has also posted two differing formula for Crawley's FX-4. Crawley's original 1961 articles list the formulae as published in "Modern Photographic Processing, Vol 1, by Grant Haist, 1979", however with no Boric acid.
Crawley FX-4 Fine Grain Developer 1961 version
Sodium Sulphite (anhydrous) 100.0 grams
Metol 1.5 grams
Hydroquinone 5.0 grams
Borax 2.5 grams
Potassium Bromide 0 .5 grams
Phenidone 0.5 grams
Water to make 1 litre
Crawley did vary some of his formulae over the years, and by 1970/72 he published FX-4 with the Phenidone reduced to 0.25 g/litre and the Hydroquinone increased to 6 g/litre
Crawley FX-4 Fine Grain Developer 1972 version
Sodium Sulphite (anhydrous) 100.0 grams
Metol 1.5 grams
Hydroquinone 6.0 grams
Borax 2.5 grams
Potassium Bromide 0 .5 grams
Phenidone 0.25 grams
Water to make 1 litre
These variations make it confusing.
Ian