BradS
Member
I was reading up on D-76 and its many variants. Somewhere along the way, I read the statement "manufacturers are forced into superaddativity". I kinda dismissed the claim on first reading...
Separately, I did a quicky cost analysis of a couple home made developers. I was somewhat surprised to find that the cost per liter of D-76/Id-11 is actually less than that of D-23.
Why? In a nutshell, D-23 cost more because Metol is expensive. Then I remembered the superaddativity comment. Manufacturers are motivated to reduce cost, maximize profit. That's what engineers do - they make trade offs. Often producing a technically inferior product that is economically superior.
So, I began to wonder about the Hydroquinone in D-76...Hydroquinone is cheap compared to Metol. Addition of hydroquinone makes it possible to use much less Metol but, it also presents some technical difficulty (e.g. activity of the developer changes, blocked highlihts, etc...). Feels like an engineering compromise.
Ultimately, I am left wondering if D-23 really is technically superior D-76. Even if d-23is clearly inferior from a strictly economic point of view.
Separately, I did a quicky cost analysis of a couple home made developers. I was somewhat surprised to find that the cost per liter of D-76/Id-11 is actually less than that of D-23.
Why? In a nutshell, D-23 cost more because Metol is expensive. Then I remembered the superaddativity comment. Manufacturers are motivated to reduce cost, maximize profit. That's what engineers do - they make trade offs. Often producing a technically inferior product that is economically superior.
So, I began to wonder about the Hydroquinone in D-76...Hydroquinone is cheap compared to Metol. Addition of hydroquinone makes it possible to use much less Metol but, it also presents some technical difficulty (e.g. activity of the developer changes, blocked highlihts, etc...). Feels like an engineering compromise.
Ultimately, I am left wondering if D-23 really is technically superior D-76. Even if d-23is clearly inferior from a strictly economic point of view.