Quotes from April and May of 2021:
https://www.fotoimpex.com/films/bun...or-up-to-6-35mm-or-120-films-100-ml-conc.html
...I just ordered the bundle of five CMS 20 II rolls plus one bottle of Adotech IV
and will reply here whenever my development time tweaking is complete.
In another thread, Henning Serger wrote last Wednesday:I'll reply here when DHL and the USPS actually deliver that order. I'm not optimistic, but will keep an open mind. We shall see.
...The US Postal "Service" just delivered my FOTOIMPEX order. It took five weeks. Not more than three months like last time, but still fairly slow.
Now I just need typical southern California "May gray" and "June gloom" to be over so that EI 6 film can be put to the test.
In the intervening two years, lots of life got in the way, and those rolls of CMS 20 II along with the bottle of Adotech IV have been sitting on a room temperature shelf unused. This past weekend I finally put one in the F6 and, with sunny skies, ran through it using both my Sigma 50mm f/1.4 Art lens and a 55mm f/2.8 Micro-Nikkor purchased brand new recently from B&H. I'd left my email address on B&H's "Notify When Available" list when Nikon discontinued the latter optic in 2020. Apparently, Nikon found one somewhere on a warehouse shelf, shipped it to B&H and I was notified. Within a couple of hours I'd ordered it, and the package showed up two days later. According to serial number tables, it was manufactured in 2005. I can find no evidence it's anything but pristine new old stock.
While I haven't printed them yet, yesterday I developed the negatives. At distances close enough to infinity (the furthest available in my back yard, 55 feet), it requires a 30X loupe to see any sharpness advantage for the Sigma. That's only slightly visible on the text at the bottom of a Macbeth Color Checker. Back on topic to the film, I'm not very happy with the color response, which is to be expected based on its attached curve. Red falloff would be problematic with any subjects containing much energy in that part of the spectrum. I certainly wouldn't load CMS 20 II if visiting Sedona.

Another issue for me is the degree of curl this polyester based product exhibits. While a glass carrier could certainly deal with that, the emulsion side is nearly as glossy as its base, so Newton's rings would likely present a major problem.
Given how well this film and developer held up in storage, and considering the challenges of shooting with an EI 6 emulsion, as well as how 35mm photography seems better suited to handheld, higher EI emulsions, I'll probably let the remainder of my 2021 shipment continue to stay in storage and see how long it remains good. With air squeezed out of bottle, I'm curious to find out the true shelf life Adotech IV.
One interesting thing observed is that the F6 data imprinting is totally invisible with this film. I don't know what color the F6 alphanumeric LEDs are, but suspect they're red. Combined with CMS 20 II's lack of red sensitivity, exposure at EI 6 means those data disappear.
