psvensson said:
The odd thing is that the MSDS for Agfa Neutol Plus, a PA print developer, lists sulfite as one of the components. Maybe it preserves some other component, but I wouldn't know what.
It may have some quality that my developer doesn't, and I have nothing against sulfite per se. I try to make things simple by starting with the minimum and working up rather than the other way because if you assume that something is necessary you may never find out it wasn't.
I think most of us, including myself for about 60 years, consider sulfite to be a necessary ingredient of developers. It preserves developing agents, it dissolves grain edges, and it is necessary to superadditivity is it not?
I find in my old age that ascorbic acid and some of its relatives are superadditive with the usual agents without sulfite, and that it is a better preservative than sulfite, which means it preserves the sulfite, not the other way round. All that's left is chewing away grains, and I don't need that. Ascorbates without sulfite are surface developers which seem to have advantages in speed/grain ratio.
Ryuji Suzuki has found that salycilic acid preserves ascorbates, but not much else will. My tack is to make concentrated tock solutions in non ionic solvents. The working solutions will not last forever, but will last long enough to do the job.
I'm not trying to be contentious here. I say use the KISS principle and add what it takes to make it work. It's like being a cook. He can add what it takes to make a good dish. Taking away is another matter.