timeUnit said:
Aha!
So I get less grain, but at the expence of "percepted" sharpness if devving in undiluted XTOL or D76? Does actual resolution change?
Part two of the question is that diluted developer gives lower contrast, I guess because of proportionally less agitation? I.e. a "compensating" effect, where the developers exhausts itself on high density areas, but keeps working in midtones and shadows. True?
Could one say that in stock XTOL my acros films will have little grain and high contrast, but maybe lack a bit of sharpness compared to XTOL 1+1? In 1+1 they will be flatter but sharper?
That Modern Photographic Processing seems like a nice bible. Will check out.
Thanks for all replies!
That book(s) are really expensive - I saw a set on e-bay used for $600. Contrast has to do with development time and aggitation. Strength of chemistry will cause a change in contrast if it becomes exhausted. Uncontrolled developer exhaustion is not usually a recommendation. You can used dilute developers without exhaustion by using more volume. The reason that with some developers, grain becomes more apparent when dilute is because of Soduim Sulfite. When the dilution of Sodium Sulfite drops below 80g per liter, it dissolves a lot less silver giving sharper grain. The reason XTOL doesn't give mushy grain full strength is because it has less sulfite than D76. It is right at the cusp full strength. The thing to remember is that different developers work differently. The staining chemical in Rodinal is very different than the isoascorbic acid in XTOL.
After a time of reading posts on this forum, you will get familiar with the strengths of different chemicals. Pyro chemicals are very different in their effects than Metol, Phenidone or Ascorbic Acid. Knowing the differences between how these chemicals are used will help you choose the soup for the effect you want. - Which - you haven't actually stated.
Roll film? 35mm? sheet film?
Do you want full film speed?
Do you want highlight clamping?
Are you trying to capture light from f1.4 to f32 in the same image?
Are you trying to expand a low contrast scene?
How big will you enlarge?
Will you use VC paper, FB paper or AZO?
Do you like gritty grain or very smooth tonality?
Do you want sharpness that will cut you or are you looking for gentler edges?
Are you putting very different challenges on the same roll of film?
I consider all these questions or more when I choose a chemistry. I chose from the following based on the answers to these questions:
PyrocatHD - XTOL - Microphen - Split D23 - PC-TEA - 510 Pyro.
- I have data on all of these to exploit their strengths in many situations.