df cardwell said:
D-23 is a virtual equivalent of D-76, with characteristics
which made it superior for labs using replenishhment in
the early '40s.
Since EVERY film is made to work well with D-76, every
film will work well with D-23. How cool is that ?
At least Cool. I've thought for some time that D-76 is no
more than a low cost D23. Low cost hydroquinone with it's
regenerative abilities takes the place of some metol.
Do you think there is any thing to that?
Many MQ and M only developers from the 20s and 30s use
100 grams of sulfite with varying amounts of M and Q. That
likely has to do with the way those developers were used
and the films put through 70 and 80 years ago.
IMO, metol only with sulfite developers have received short
shift. D23 is very rich in Metol so makes a good A bath
B bath. I suggest sulfite for the B bath. It has a ph
between that of borax and metaborate.
I've tested a low sulfite one-shot using 1 gram of metol
in a 1% solution of sulfite; encouraging results with Tech
Pan and Pan F+. A half liter, 1:3, of an 8 - 80 gram formula
I used two nights ago did well on a roll of Delta 3200.
Of course a two chemical developer, one or two bath,
appeals to anybody's minimalist instincts. The only thing
that bothers me about the Metol only sulfite combination
is the film speed coming out of it. How close is that speed
compared to MQ and PQ or, for that matter, MC-PC
combinations?
Today's films are not what they were 70 and 80 years
ago. I don't want to be too much of a minimalist. Dan