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D76 versus ID11, Are they the same things ?

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In scientific terms, these two are called Schrödinger Developers, i.e., simultaneously both the same and not the same when observed from a photography-devoted forum.
 
"This life as you now live it and have lived it, you will have to live once more and innumerable times more; and there will be nothing new in it, but every pain and every joy and every thought and sigh and everything unutterably small or great in your life will have to return to you, all in the same succession and sequence."
— Friedrich Nietzsche

So basically it’s a blend of The Never-Ending September and Groundhog Day?! Ugh!
 
Perhaps each time we answer Umut's questions so thoroughly that he never needs to participate further but as koraks says we have said it all before and it's all already on Photrio, often in one long previous thread in the case of this question

pentaxuser
 
Perhaps each time we answer Umut's questions so thoroughly that he never needs to participate further but as koraks says we have said it all before and it's all already on Photrio, often in one long previous thread in the case of this question

pentaxuser

It's called "SEARCH"! I have to admit that I have, on occasion, committed the sin of asking here before searching myself. 30 lashes to me with a wet noodle.
 
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That suggests that D76 is somewhat more active than ID11 at higher dilutions. Perhaps the Ph is higher. Maybe Ilford skimps on the borax. Or perhaps the times could be the same and the results virtually identical. Maybe they think, if you use D76, you want your film to be lower-contrast - especially if you water it down.

(Times shown from Delta 100).
 
Keep in mind when it comes to pushing or any EI other than ISO speed, there are no standardized criteria so recommendations can be quite different for identical materials / developers.

Ilford’s and Kodak’s standard agitation recommendations are also a little different, which could have minor effects on recommended development times.

Then there’s just the fact we don’t really know what each manufacturer does to determine recommended times for other manufacturers’ products. Some of it could simply be extrapolation. It could also be plain wrong. Consider (one example) for a long time Ilford’s recommended development time for its own Delta 100/DD-X combination was wrong. Etc.



I did not look at the other times, not sure why at stock same times but not a bit, quite of difference with 1:1 1:3 and push.
 
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