I ordered some BTTB developer, so am going to give it a try. Firstly, I want to expose a step tablet to generate a curve or two..
AA suggested, that with the long straight-line regions of the thin emulsion films that were available at that time, to develop in bath A for just 2-3 minutes with "constant" agitation........I wonder would this be problematic with T-grain films. Three minutes in bath A is less than anyone has mentioned for bath A in this thread and all seem to state using some method of intermitttent agitation in their bath A............maybe that's accurate, but I didn't check 5 pages of posts. BT recommend some form of intermittent agitation as well in the first bath. I wonder has anyone following used continuous agitation in their bath A, either T-grain emulsion or otherwise.
There's a lot of debate/confusion about how much/how often to agitate in both bath A and B, and much of what I've read leads me to think that it doesn't much matter as long as you don't wander into the territory of extremes (no agitation/constant, vigorous agitation).
Ultimately, I think it's worth your while to conduct your own experiments to see what works
for you. Expose a roll of your chosen film with the same image (maybe bracket up to one stop plus and minus) and cut the roll into pieces and develop each differently to give you something to make comparisons.
That said, I have not found any problems using "T-grain" (Kodak) or "Core-shell" (Ilford) films in the BTTB developer. I typically use 4 + 4 minutes at 68-71F with 10 seconds agitation every minute in bath A and two inversions every minute in bath B. In some instances I want more contrast for a particular result and so I will add more time to Bath A: up to 6 minutes in some cases. Not agitating the tank at all will almost certainly result in streaks, bromide streamers and (with 35mm film) sprocket hole marks. But again, I suggest you perform your own tests to see where the sweet spot lies for your needs.