Raghu Kuvempunagar
Member
Since OP's is a substitute of a substitute, I think it makes little sense to tinker with it further especially since OP is getting results that he likes.
Is there a place here for some Photoflow in the A bath to improve penetration? If so, it may be possible to reduce the concentration of the active agents in that bath. I am thinking of thin emulsions that don't carry as much from A to B bath.
Is there a place here for some Photoflow in the A bath to improve penetration? If so, it may be possible to reduce the concentration of the active agents in that bath. I am thinking of thin emulsions that don't carry as much from A to B bath.
As ever, the effort that would go into designing a really good two-bath developer is likely equal or greater to that of designing a really good (and much more flexible) single bath for one-shot use...
Just curious. How do you know for sure that the first bath developer has not successfully penetrated into all regions of the film in the 3-5 minutes of the bath? Is there any scientific study that you can point me to? Thanks in advance.
Phenidone develops in acidic conditions down to like 6.2 if I recall. Try it out some time and I'd be willing to bet the A bath develops a thin image unless it's below that pH.Hmmm.. I've done two bath developing using Pyrocat HD concentrate (water based) as the first bath and a single use Carbonate-Bicarbonate buffer with a bit of Sulphite as the second bath. There's no development in the first bath as Pyrocat HD concentrate is acidic. But I never got thin negatives. Neither baths were longer than 5 minutes IIRC.
Phenidone develops in acidic conditions down to like 6.2 if I recall. Try it out some time and I'd be willing to bet the A bath develops a thin image unless it's below that pH.
Well I've checked the film after first bath in the Pyrocat HD based process I described earlier.There was no development which is not surprising because Pyrocat HD concentrate has much lower pH than the minimum required by Phenidone.
Good to know. You still have a good bit of developing agents as I said and with a one shot B, you don't have carryover to worry about.
Do you have a recommendation for divided Pyrocat HD? It seems to vary:Hmmm.. I've done two bath developing using Pyrocat HD concentrate (water based) as the first bath and a single use Carbonate-Bicarbonate buffer with a bit of Sulphite as the second bath. There's no development in the first bath as Pyrocat HD concentrate is acidic. But I never got thin negatives. Neither baths were longer than 5 minutes IIRC.
Do you have a recommendation for divided Pyrocat HD? It seems to vary:
https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/divided-pyrocat-hd.51000/
I spent quite a bit of time on it and I can assure you that the effort is indeed quite a bit more. Getting something that develops a roll nicely is not hard. Getting the carryover situation to be right is much harder. I made several pretty good developers, but still could only re-use the 2nd bath about 3 times for my best effort. Diafine, by contrast, can use it over and over and get the same results. I documented my best effort here (ironically it was also the first experiment): https://imager.ie/a-phenidone-hydroquinone-two-bath-developer/ This is not intended to be a Diafine replacement, though, it's aimed at higher sharpness (which it achieves).
I think Diafine has pretty solid & high capacity (an important, yet overlooked factor in many home-designed formulae) carbonate/ bicarbonate buffering in part B - which the pH I recall people have found would seem to support. Raising your buffer capacity significantly (and going to carbonate/ bicarbonate) might be worthwhile.
From recall, I found Diafine had a fairly noticeable seasoning effect too - and I do wonder if that had something to do with there being sufficient carryover to essentially turn bath B into a somewhat effective developer in and of itself, with bath A effectively providing enough ongoing replenishment & pre-charging the system for bath B to do most of the work - or it may simply have been build-up of byproducts in bath A - in other words, I'm open minded about how much development is or isn't happening in bath A, but I think Bath B's role is often dismissed rather too freely. The problem is that to thoroughly resolve this would require a rather large R&D effort, possibly extending to microdensitometry and the like.
And that's before considering the problems of what compensation actually delivers (XP2 Super in C-41's curve exhibits real compensation behaviour via the DIR couplers etc - as opposed to the lowered average gradient that is often mistakenly referred to as 'compensation') - and Dimezone S/ HQ ratios can be manipulated to raise edge sharpness, but this is likely challenging without microdensitometry or similar (unless it causes 'coverage' problems that become grossly visible as strong granularity) to balance edge sharpness and good development.
According to user reports, very little or no development happens in the first bath of Diafine.
I developed ortho Tri-X and xray film in Diafine. Both showed an image when removed from bath A. It was low-density and low-contrast.
Ok, Diafine formula itself might have gone through changes over time. Way back in 2003 Lex Jenkins reported that there was no development in the first bath. See this discussion.
The Diafine I was using was made long before that.
Anyway, not being able to see it doesn't mean there's no developing activity. There's bound to be some. If I'd taken those sheets and fixed them instead of putting them in bath B, they would have ended up transparent.
Not sure I understood. Did you mean there could be development of silver halide that doesn't add anything to the density?
B bath usually is announced as borax or metaborate plus sulfite...
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