Dear danzyc
Well, These Tetenal Kits are not as bad as sometimes stated, as long they are not “overstressed” by trying to get all the films developed, the booklet states to be able to develop (divide by 2 at least). They should be mixed and used one shot, or if reuse is planned, reuse it soon and only one time!
In my point of view these kits are more for “beginners” (Sorry bad term, keep it simple “KISS” it's well-meant), because they are somewhat more practical in mixing and using. I can speak for Tetenal only, the stuff I grew up with (well, excluding Rodinal of course). It’s quite simple to measure up, usually all parts are taken in the same or similar amounts, or to completion.
Colortec-41 Developer part A/B/C is each 100ml for a litre, Blix part A/B is each 200ml for a litre. This makes mixing easy and reliable, suppresses mixing errors by maybe not so accurate measuring cylinders or practice. But you pay a high price for that, these kits are quite uneconomic.
Cleary excluded are monoparts for me, they’ve may gone bad in shop’s shelf already…
The Problem you stated in your former thread “homemade c41 processing problems” will repeat with EACH Developer of ANY brand if stored partway used a month in THAT kind of bottle. This is more a question of proper usage, not of using “the one and only right” chemistry.
Back to your question, if you feel not sure about color chemistry or wet darkroom technique, or do it only occasionally, a kit may be better. The results (if limits / lifetime are respected) are quite well. The mask will differ a bit, but this will be compensated by filtration during printing. For my opinion the resolution, color saturation and granularity (if you wanna say it this way) is usually good. But there is something you will see maybe later; in my eyes the image contrast is a bit too harsh.
Quite often you are going to dodge and burn parts of the print (that happened at least to me).
From the moment I’ve got my hands on Kodaks Flexicolor I fell in love, this stuff is less poppy but more distinguished in reproducing color tones /densitys the right way. This is true even for cheaper "consumer" films too. Don't nail me here, this are just personal experiences.
Because of that even behavior you get better prints without extra effort, it’s a joy to use.
Without intention to stress this again, if possible buy separate bleach and fixing bathes and use a stabilization bath at the end of the process.
Beside the fact that image quality rises, it’s cheaper in the end, the reusable and replenish-able bleach is a mayor cost factor, which will be wasted without need in a Blix bath. But all this is written down here somewhere, just browse a bit
Regards,
Stefan