ame01999
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The latest film developing cookbook implies as much, remarking that Kodak has stopped giving developing times for dilutions greater than 1:1. But it recommends Xtol at 1:3 to 1:5 or even 1:10, at which point it performs somewhat like a compensating non-solvent developer, though with still impressively fine grain and greater speed; more of an S-curve and better mid-tone gradation.
First of all, the authors recommend a test that sounds a bit trickier than one's typical hypo check:
1. Expose fresh photographic paper to room light,
2. Put a drop of Xtol on it
3. Wait 30 seconds.
4. Put another drop of Xtol on it.
5. Wait 30 seconds.
6. Rinse and fix and wash and dry (but no developing beforehand?)
"The first spot should be dark grey and the second one medium grey."
It doesn't describe what failure looks like, which is a bit unscientific of them.
So I'd be thrilled to learn that XTOL is now flawless and this test is no longer needed?
The authors hypothesize that XTOL may fail when its level of DTPA is no longer strong enough to counter the detrimental effect of water or chemical impurities. It unhelpfully recommends adding more DTPA to prevent developer failure, but doesn't inform the reader how much, as if assuming all of us are experienced chemistry grads with an innate feel for chemical ratios.
As published, the Xtol recipe contains 1 gram DTPA. So is adding "more" an amount like, say, another 1 gram? Or more like 0.05 grams?
First of all, the authors recommend a test that sounds a bit trickier than one's typical hypo check:
1. Expose fresh photographic paper to room light,
2. Put a drop of Xtol on it
3. Wait 30 seconds.
4. Put another drop of Xtol on it.
5. Wait 30 seconds.
6. Rinse and fix and wash and dry (but no developing beforehand?)
"The first spot should be dark grey and the second one medium grey."
It doesn't describe what failure looks like, which is a bit unscientific of them.
So I'd be thrilled to learn that XTOL is now flawless and this test is no longer needed?

The authors hypothesize that XTOL may fail when its level of DTPA is no longer strong enough to counter the detrimental effect of water or chemical impurities. It unhelpfully recommends adding more DTPA to prevent developer failure, but doesn't inform the reader how much, as if assuming all of us are experienced chemistry grads with an innate feel for chemical ratios.
As published, the Xtol recipe contains 1 gram DTPA. So is adding "more" an amount like, say, another 1 gram? Or more like 0.05 grams?