What I found strange is that despite the alleged similarities between D76 and ID11, I cannot find any reference in the Ilford instruction sheet to a minimum amount of stock to be used.
In the most extreme example i.e. rotary processing in a 240 ml Jobo tank the user may be tempted to use as little as 35ml basing this on 1+3 and the 140ml required for rotary processing.
Does this mean that Ilford is confident that 35ml of ID11 stock is OK or does it mean that it expects users to be sensible, astute or whichever appropriate word you choose to realise that while rotary is fine it requires at least as much stock as does inversion? In this case the minimum stock would be 60ml at 1+3
It just seems to me that it either expects the user to have enough knowledge of the properties of ID11 to know what the unspecified minimum stock needs to be or it doesn't say anything because users can and should assume that even at 1+3 using the Jobo minimum amount of 140ml that 35ml is fine?
I used ID11 on my beginner's nightschool darkroom course some 19 years ago and then bought ID11 for home use as that was the only developer I knew anything about. It was all so long ago but I feel very sure I have never used ID11 at 1+3 and I am certain I have never tried rotary processing with it. However I am almost certain that on the nightschool course and at home I used 1+1 so I found that 125ml was fine as a minimum stock quantity
It does raise interesting questions. Wouldn't it be great if it was 35ml stock per 35mm film as that's about 38 film per one litre packet
Everything in my instinct/being says that it has to be more than 35ml but you can't always rely on instinct
On top of Fort Apache when the sergeant says:"It sure is quiet tonight" there has to be a time when instead of an arrow through the hat, all that arrives is the sound of quiet snoring
pentaxuser