In a inversion process you have about 1/2 of the exhaustion, but then also you put twice the amount back into the stock solution compared to rotation processing. In the end, that is in the stock solution bottle, the situation will be exhaustion-wise the same for both inversion and rotation. So, on this your argument is invalid.As I recall from discussions when PE was involved, if you follow Jobo's instructions on how much chemistry to use in the rotary systems, you'll be exhausting your chemistry more in a single use than you ever would in an inversion system, and then pouring (part of) that back into the stock bottle.
What may matter though is whether during the processing the rather small volume per film area is depleted to a degree affecting good processing.
Jobo processors though have been used in commercial photography over here for decades and I never heard of depletion issues.
Furthermore, by putting the cap on the tank (driven by its bottom end) one can easily highten the used volume.
And one then can do sensitometric tests under same processing dynamics, on whether there is a difference in outcome depending on used volume.
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