BS, some people do know that number, just no one you know. The math is not meaningless.
My statement was a response to a statement that began: "XTOL tends to...", thus the speaker
purported to have that very knowledge. Sure, it -and many other developers- can fail
*in response to user error*. Alert the press. But it's a poor craftsman who blames his tools.
The internet is awesome, plenty of places to find good information, and this is one of them.
Are those who've had issues with XTOL wrong? No. But how many people had no issues and
never said anything about it? Am I going to go into every "Let's hate on XTOL" thread
[they come up pretty regularly] and provide a contrary opinion? No, I got tired of it, and
I'll bet I'm not the only one. To some, it feels good to bash the Big Yellow, it's edgy,
subversive, shows pluck, maybe some street cred,
"yeah, I used to use D-76, but that was soooo long ago..."
XTOL rocks, there I said it. Yes, I keep it in airtight bottles with very little air in them.
Oxidation happens. Works for me, and I'm not alone, there are others out there too...
we're quiet and we're busy.
-Tim
I don't know the bottom number. No one does. Even if we did it would be meaningless. There are too many variables involved (mixing, storing, handling, etc.). It doesn't fail like a raffle drawing. I'm suggesting it fails for a very real and explainable reason.
And I for one put a lot of weight on "anecdotal evidence," especially in cases like this where no such statistics can be known. I read product reviews before I make a purchase. I call references before I hire someone. I check APUG before I try a new film or developer. If people are reporting that their XTOL failed on them quite suddenly, are they wrong?