[QUOTES=justpete;680874]
"I'm finding dev times with Formulary divided D-76 to be very
short, essentially uncontrollable, if low contrast negs are needed."
Hardly the results one needs from a divided developer. What film?
"Developing in bath A only shows some activity so would it be
possible to dilute bath A and get back to longer bath B times or
maybe titrate the pH down a bit with sodium metabisulfite to
achieve the same effect?"
I'd consider substituting a one-shot bicarbonated B for the
current B. Perhaps a heaping teaspoon each 500ml.
I would not dilute the A bath. Your B bath is too active;
building contrast too quickly. Your film? Dan
Tri-X 400, Plus-X 125, Arista EDU Ultra 200, and HP5+, pretty much the lot.
The Formulary bath B is a 6% (by weight) solution of Borax which was made with distilled water after heating to ~52C. Half the bottles have a hard precipitate in the bottom which I assume to be that which couldn't be held in solution at room temp but keeps the pH constant in solution by keeping the concentration at or near saturation.
I could titrate the pH of the borax solution downward with some boric acid which would reduce the concentration of tetraborate hydroxide but the buffering action of the solution would hold pH regardless.
I've mixed up some 5% by weight sodium carbonate bath B as well as some 5% sodium metaborate bath B but they both have a higher pH although neither is anywhere near saturation (I think). I have sodium bicarbonate to titrate the former down in pH and again, boric acid, for the latter. But the concentrations won't change.
Maybe just diluting the borax solution is the way to go?