Gerald C Koch
Member
Once you get away from standard film development (developer, stop bath, fixer) results can become film dependent. You can see this from the EI speeds listed for Diafine compared to the box speeds. If two bath development worked like regular development there would a constant speed increase for all films. In reality some films react better to Diafine than do others. So as Michael points out adding a restrainer to the formula may not be so simple. It might require recalibrating the developer for each film you use it for.
BTW, the Diafine bath B is not a simple alkaline bath. From the MSDS it contains: sodium sulfite, sodium carbonate, sodium bicarbonate, and trisodium phosphate. These are the listed chemicals but we know MSDS's do not require all chemicals to be listed.
BTW, the Diafine bath B is not a simple alkaline bath. From the MSDS it contains: sodium sulfite, sodium carbonate, sodium bicarbonate, and trisodium phosphate. These are the listed chemicals but we know MSDS's do not require all chemicals to be listed.
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