Yes, the formula appeared in Beutler's book published in 1961.
However, formulas of this type (also including FX-1, FX-2, and numerous others) are designed to work on the emulsion surface and are therefore not dependent on emulsion thickness.
BTW, the number 105 should not be included in the name. This is merely the number of the formula in the Anchell book. It is not part of the formulas name and you will not see it used before Anchell's book was published.
This response is a little late, but better late than miss dinner, eh? Anyway, the formula for Buetler's high acutance developer was given to me by Lawrence Cooper. The designation Buetler #105 came from Lawrence. I have since seen it published online as Beutler's High Acutance Divided Developer and in Hans Windisch's book,
The Manual of Modern Photography published in 1956, it is called "A special developer for low-speed film". According to the Formulary this is the formula for Neofin Blue which was formulated by Buetler. So call it what you like.
In Windisch's book, he makes it clear that it creates fine grain and high definition in slow-speed films. So, yes, Gerald Koch is correct, it was not meant for Tri-X.
Also in Windisch, he gives a dilution of 1+1+500, not 800 as has since been published. In the Cookbook. However, the formula in the Darkroom Cookbook as given by Lawrence has the dilution as 1+1800. From what I hear the higher dilution seems to work for those using it. I would suggest trying the 1+1+500 dilution.
I will include this along with Windisch's recommendations for time/temperature and dilution for medium-speed films in the 5th edition of the
Darkroom Cookbook which I'm working on at the moment (which is why I'm parsing the Phototrio Forum to find out what the guys and gals actually using formulas like this are recommending).