GLS, page 35, under Sodium and Potassium bisulfite.
Most likely activity of carbonate there is reduced by acidity of metabisulfite as mention by Relistan.
I have been thinking about the next two bath developer formula I will try.
It will be interesting to see if doubling the sulfite in part A has any appreciable effect on solvent action/graininess/sharpness. Of course it depends on the film. It may or may not also have a slight favourable impact on emulsion speed. I would probably try 100g. Traditionally speaking solvent action needs time (this was the mechanism of D-25 as a variant of D-23).
I'm sure this new round of exploration will be quite fascinating. It would be nice, when you do this, if you can also compare your results with those of Thornton's Two Bath.
Thanks! Well, I have used that developer quite a bit in the past. I find it very fine grain, but below box speed, and low-ish contrast.
Rudiger Hartung uses a variant of Thornton's two bath which has a bit of phenidone in bath A. He says this addition gives him better speed than the standard Thornton's.
He has an interesting technique for getting higher contrast with Thornton's - multiple rounds of two baths. After the end of the first round consisting of baths A and B, he gives the film a good wash and does a second round of Thornton's.
He's active on Facebook and has provided many examples with these enhancements.
I think you left out hydroquinone in the above post.
Also that seems like a lot of EDTA. How did you decide on that quantity?
In the 1930s I believe Curt Emmermann, author of "Leica Technik", invented the now discontinued Emofin which had the following properties:
(1) There was some development in part A (I have checked this). The part B was based on sulfite-carbonate. Maybe this is necessary to give maximum EI, IDK.
(2) It was based on metol, phenidone had not been invented at the time.
(3) Part A contained PPD. This is a solvent but since it is hard to get and can cause an allergic reaction it is not really of interest today.
Only (1) seems relevant , some development in part 1 may give higher EI.
Also, many of these 2 bath threads state that just developing for 4min +4min at any reasonable temperature and agitation will do.
I did not find this with my 2-bath developer MDS-1, I think the times, temperature and agitation have to be more closely monitored.
This is possibly the reason why many substitute formulas fail, inadequate research and instructions, at least for the case where there is some development in part A.
In this I note that Emofin came with quite a complicated instruction sheet.
https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/2b/eb/16/473305316ea7bd/US5853964.pdfTwo things about 2B-2 (post 70) :
(1) In Xtol they used only 1g/L DTPA so I suggest reducing EDTA to that level, otherwise have little idea of its effect, see example 1 $7 here:
https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/2b/eb/16/473305316ea7bd/US5853964.pdf
(2) The part A seems otherwise similar to the Diafine substitute formula posted on Photrio and the part B is similar to sodium carbonate given in this MSDS for Diafine part B (part A lists only "Trade Secret"):
https://www.freestylephoto.biz/pdf/msds/acufine/Diafine_Part_B.pdf
So the blotchy effect illustrated is not explained from the other ingredients.
In this I note that Emofin came with quite a complicated instruction sheet.
Great work, thank you! I will give it a try - as I don't have the chelating agent, I'm thinking leaving out the sulfite (might have impurities) and using demineralised water might make a somewhat stable bath A?@grain elevator You asked earlier in the thread about ascorbic acid two baths. Here is a good one!
I agree with much of this but Kodak and others don't like to touch pyro or PPD or 2-bath and when they effectively closed the labs down , according to PE they were still working on new developers.I believe this continues in Germany particularly. It is not too difficult to see the differences between developers using quite simple equipment if you look closely enough:I know this is all fun to fool with, but once I set up a test subject (my bookshelf), exposed 120 film with a strobe consistent to 1/10 stop, developed the film in 4 different developers, and made 16" prints I realized there really isn't a whole lot of difference between developers.
If you want fine grain with classic tonality, use D-23.
If you want sharper grain with classic tonality, use Beutler's.
For something in between Beutler's and D-23, just substitute metaborate for the carbonate in the Beutler's formula.
If you want the sharpest negative possible (too sharp in my opinion), use Pyrocat-HD.
Even Rodinal wasn't significantly different than Beutler's in terms of grain, although the mid tones seemed to be a little too bright.
FP4 in Beutler's might be the most beautiful tonality I've ever seen in a negative; the grain is so tight it's almost not there, even at 16". HP5 in Beutler's has a grainier structure that is quite beautiful, too, and only appears about 1/4 stop less contrasty than FP4.
I'm sure you could easily reproduce these results with D-76, Diafine, Xtol, Barry Thornton's Two Bath, etc., all of which I have used extensively. In short, there's just not enough difference between them to justify trying to invent a new developer. Kodak and others spent millions of dollars and untold man-hours on this project, how can we possibly improve on that?
Lord knows the time I wasted until I ran these tests and proved it to myself. Just pick one developer and get to work. I'm a Beutler's Man now.
Kodak and others spent millions of dollars and untold man-hours on this project, how can we possibly improve on that?
Great work, thank you! I will give it a try - as I don't have the chelating agent, I'm thinking leaving out the sulfite (might have impurities) and using demineralised water might make a somewhat stable bath A?
Congratulation Relistan!
So, how is Trisodium phosphate in relation to Borax, Kodalk or soda and other traditional alkalies in term of activity?
What is function of Sodium bicarbonate in B?
Nice amount of sulphite in B!
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