dancqu
Member
Dupont Defender D 55 or D55 or 55D or 55 D, however you spell it
I've seen two formulas for it. Is there A correct formula. Dan
I've seen two formulas for it. Is there A correct formula. Dan
dancqu said:Dupont Defender D 55 or D55 or 55D or 55 D, however you spell it
I've seen two formulas for it. Is there A correct formula. Dan
MikeK said:My Souce, old text from about the late 1940's-50's is a little different:
water 750ml
Metol 2.5 grams
Sodium Sulfite 37.5 grams
Hydroquinone 10.0 grams
Sodium Carbonate 37.5 grams
Potassium Bromide 13.0 grams
Me thinks I will do some more research.....But both formula should give good results
Mike
Tom Hoskinson said:The difference in Sodium Carbonate weights between the 2 recipes is 17% this is consistent with the 37.5 grams being the anhydrous form and the 44 grams being the monohydrated form of Na CO3. If so, the two recipes are functionally the same.
martin@jangowski.de said:The main difference is the bromide quantity, and this is what makes this developer more or less warm. I tried the version with 13g bromide and found it an excellent and very warm tone developer for the Forte Polywarmtone paper.
Martin
MSchuler said:Also, If I mix the hydroquinone-free formula, would it be a problem to add it back in afterwards?
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