According to Kodak, one gallon of D-76 stock will yield 16 sheets of 8x10, or 64 sheets of 4x5 (1280 sq inches).
From a fresh batch of D-76, I have developed in stock solution, a total of 13 sheets of 4x5, or 260 sq inches, in 3 sessions. Sessions 1 & 2 were in Paterson tank using the taco method (4 sheets and 3 sheets respectively), and one session in an F-R Cut Sheet tank (6 sheets). The F-R tank uses a whopping 1600ml per run, or (in this case) 166.66ml per sheet, so I used the full gallon for those 3 runs.
I saved the used stock solution in 3 unused/empty containers, ie, I didn't pour it back into my working solution.
So now I have just under a gallon of D-76 that has had about 20% of it's working capacity (1280/260) depleted. This batch is about 2 weeks old, so still very young.
Do I need to make some type of compensation for the 20%-less-potent solution, or should it be good to go the way it is? I know D-76 is cheap, but this just seems incredibly wasteful, and it no longer is cheap when you only get a 20% yield(cost increases 5x).
From a fresh batch of D-76, I have developed in stock solution, a total of 13 sheets of 4x5, or 260 sq inches, in 3 sessions. Sessions 1 & 2 were in Paterson tank using the taco method (4 sheets and 3 sheets respectively), and one session in an F-R Cut Sheet tank (6 sheets). The F-R tank uses a whopping 1600ml per run, or (in this case) 166.66ml per sheet, so I used the full gallon for those 3 runs.
I saved the used stock solution in 3 unused/empty containers, ie, I didn't pour it back into my working solution.
So now I have just under a gallon of D-76 that has had about 20% of it's working capacity (1280/260) depleted. This batch is about 2 weeks old, so still very young.
Do I need to make some type of compensation for the 20%-less-potent solution, or should it be good to go the way it is? I know D-76 is cheap, but this just seems incredibly wasteful, and it no longer is cheap when you only get a 20% yield(cost increases 5x).

