Ryuji said:
There is no advantage in using two bath print developer. There is probably bigger disadvantages in doing so.
You may well be right about the hydroquinone being unnecessary in a PC developer, but I couldn't disagree more with your take on divided developer. Although I would tend to agree with you with regard to film development, for paper, it's a very different story. Here are some of the advantages that have kept me faithful to divided paper developers for more than 25 years. (I'm talking about a developer where all the reducing agents are in Bath A and the alkaline is in Bath B. No rinse between the two.
1. Within all but extreme limits, one can ignore time and temperature variables. Any temperature will do. Not only will ambient room temperature work just fine, so will ambient water temperature, even if that is fairly significantly (10-15 degrees F.) different from room temp.
2. Near perfect repeatability when making multiple prints from the same negative, assuming same exposure controls under the enlarger. Since all that happens in Bath A is that the latent image soaks up the volume of developing agents that it needs, and in Bath B develops to exhaustion (but no further!), repeatability is ensured. Bath A doesn't become exhausted--just used up volumetrically. As Bath B becomes exhausted, it may take longer (more than a minute) to develop the print fully and/or the blacks may become weak. When that happens (after about 40 8X10's), I just dump it and mix some more. Since it's only Washing Soda (carbonate) and water, it's mere pennies.
3. Excellent contrast control. Since I now use only multicontrast paper, this is not as much an advantage as it is with graded papers. When I used graded papers exclusively, I used to have two Bath A's-- one a straight metol/sulfite formula similar to Selectol Soft and one more like Dektol with metol/sulfite/HQ. Depending on what I was looking for in the final print, a #2 paper run through the soft Bath A would give me a #1 1/2 grade. A number # paper run through the harder Bath A would give me a #2 1/2 grade. In other words, I had half-grade controls.
4. When I was doing a lot of Cibachromes/Ilfochromes, I used my own divided homebrew instead of Ilford's to control the high contrast inherent in the process. It also effectively eliminated the need for temperature controls, since it's only the developer that had needed to be controlled anyway. Didn't matter a hoot with the bleach and fix-- just took longer or shorter depending on the ambient temp. Dividing the developer was a much easier solution to high Ilfochrome contrast than making masks.
5. It's dirt cheap. Since Bath A will easily keep for 6-8 months before becoming oxidized, and Bath B costs mere pennies per batch, I don't spend a lot of money on chemistry.
6. Since one cannot alter the print in the developer stage by either over or under-developing, it tends to make one a better printer at the exposure end of things. What manipulation you do has to be done under the enlarger. Since I also use split filter printing (1 exposure each at full magenta and full cyan), that combined with divided development gives me a lot fewer headaches in the darkroom.
So perhaps none of these advantages look particularly compelling to you, but to me, they are.
Larry