Our college recently got a donation of old photography materials. Included in are cans of D76 and 76R replenisher, Polydol, Selectol and Selectol soft. But what intrigued me are 6 cans of Acufine and a can of replenisher. I've read a few testimonials about this developer but I have not found a dev chart.
Has anyone here used the mentioned chemicals? I need a a starting point for the tests that I'd be doing.
Go to APUG's home page and click on one of our sponsors...DigitalTruth.com wherein you'll find the "massive development chart". Click on 'developers' and you will find a large array of development times for different films using acufine.
Selectol Soft is a low contrast, warmish developer for prints. Ansel Adams sometimes used a tray of Dektol and a tray of Selectol Soft, and varied the amount of time in each one, to get subtle contrast shifts with graded paper.
Selectol I believe is another print developer, and I think Polydol is as well, but don't hold me to that.
I use Acufine regularly. It will usually give you an honest 1 stop over the box speed of most B&W films.
Kodak Selectol: Kodak described it as "an improved D-52 type developer for warm tone papers."
For use, dilute 1 part stock solution with 1 part water. Develop about 2 minutes at 68 deg. F. For greater softness increase the dilution (up to 2 parts water, 1 part developer). For greater tonal warmth add 3 grams potassium bromide.
Kodak Selectol Soft: Kodak's description" For softer, lower contrast on most papers without sacrificing tonal scale."
Kodak Polymax Developer: "Produces neutral or cold tones with cold tone papers."
These old cans don't go for much, if they sell at all, on ebay. However, ebay may just not be the right place to sell them. Perhaps there's a better place for stuff like that, but I don't know where.
As mentioned above polydol was used for roll and sheet film often in deep tanks. Finer grain than DK 50 with good tones. If I can find my 1968 Kodak Data Guide I will post the times for TriX and PlX.