But hang on, do you use 120 film?
Yes - regularly. However I have never used a staining developer so does any staining developer require a different agitation regime or is it only the OP's developer which is Pyro 510 that requires an agreed different agitation regime? If so, what should that regime be and how much "leeway" do you have if what you do varies from whatever that specific regime requires, assuming that out of the many respondents' posts we have a consensus on the exact regime to be used
I note that the OP has used D76 as well and still noticed the unevenness of which he complains. So have I used D76? No, but I was a regular user of ID11 and 120 film and never noticed a problem with the Ilford regime. So is ID11 close enough to D76 to count?
Ah but have I used D400 in 120? Frankly I am unsure but does that rule me out from seriously wondering aloud about the Ilford agitation being the likely cause?
I suppose the crucial question is: Have I added less to the process that will lead to the real cause by making a negative statement about the cause being the agitation regime than others who supply what works for them?
What tends to happen with threads looking for a solution is that in most cases we drill down to a cause too quickly and before we know where we are it is a question solely of getting the agitation regime exactly correct for the solution. In this case there is a groundswell towards the wrong agitation being the problem and the quest to get it absolutely right instead of trying first to examine if there is real evidence for it
So as I said is there a definite difference to the basics of the agitation regime for staining developers in general and is there a specific and long recognised way to agitate 510 Pyro
If there is can we reach a consensus on this? However we still have to recognise that somehow this proposed solution needs to be reconciled with the same problem in using D76
pentaxuser