Down Under
Member
In another post, I recently wrote about Kodak's DK60A developer, and commented I believe this is a forgotten and possibly underrated developer.
It was popular in the 1950s and 1960s as a general purpose developer for the films of that era. The formula is available and can easily be mixed from raw chemistry. Also the replenisher. I used both in my time (early to late 1960s) and it served its purpose well until I moved on to two bath developers and then to Kodak D76 and Xtol. Negatives I processed during that long ago time enlarge well and show very little grain, but I am unsure if this is due to the developer or the films.
I am now thinking about mixing up a liter or two for the sake of nostalgia and to play with in my home darkroom. I still have a large stock of Kodak Panatomic-X in my freezer, also some quite old TMax of both speeds and a few dozen 120 Rollei films.
I did post something about DK60A some years ago. Got a few comments but did not follow up. I will look up all the old threads I can find and see what information I can get from them.
Has anyone used this for modern films such as TMax and other films?
I would be interested in comments from anyone who has used it or still uses it, or am I the only one?
It was popular in the 1950s and 1960s as a general purpose developer for the films of that era. The formula is available and can easily be mixed from raw chemistry. Also the replenisher. I used both in my time (early to late 1960s) and it served its purpose well until I moved on to two bath developers and then to Kodak D76 and Xtol. Negatives I processed during that long ago time enlarge well and show very little grain, but I am unsure if this is due to the developer or the films.
I am now thinking about mixing up a liter or two for the sake of nostalgia and to play with in my home darkroom. I still have a large stock of Kodak Panatomic-X in my freezer, also some quite old TMax of both speeds and a few dozen 120 Rollei films.
I did post something about DK60A some years ago. Got a few comments but did not follow up. I will look up all the old threads I can find and see what information I can get from them.
Has anyone used this for modern films such as TMax and other films?
I would be interested in comments from anyone who has used it or still uses it, or am I the only one?