If you want a great scan, you need to expose and develop well.
My comment re:the utility of scans on the Film Dev website:
That some of them include photos, is not necessarily all that helpful. In the vast majority of cases, they are scans from negatives. This doesn't tell me much whether the negatives would be suitable for how I'd like to print them.
I stand by that assessment. That was the gist of my message.
The image I posted was an extreme example I had handy that resembles many of the scans shown on the TriX recipes page linked to earlier: borderline recognizable, but it'll still trick some viewers into believing it was a good way to expose and process that film. Case in point:
"Ooh, there's images attached, lookie now! So you really CAN use Tri-X at 6400, I must tell all my friends - guys guys, Kodak lied to us all along, TriX is really faster than Delta3200!!"
Some of us would have binned it.
Too much work snipping out a single negative from a strip just to bin it, or crop it out of the index scan. Also, it turned out to be usable as an example. I'm glad I kept it.
I've found (with my particular workflow anyway) that I get better scans more easily from negatives that would be thinner and lower in contrast than I'd prefer for darkroom printing.
I think pretty much everyone who wet prints as well as scans has observed this. Thin negatives generally scan much better than they print. In particular shadow regions can be boosted in contrast in digital post processing far beyond the gamma of grade 5 paper.