Steve,
I really appreciate your willingness to share this experience of yours. I've long suspected that greater dilution and lots of patience has unknown benefits, but my areas of experimentation haven't given my much experience in that particular direction - in fact, sometimes directly opposite such as development with continuous agitation of 7 35mm reels in an 8 reel inversion tank so they move around violently, with temperature lowered, to suppress fog using 2475 recording film in Windisch pyrocatechin. That worked great, but it did NOTHING like what your methods do. It got me the result I needed. I think your methods may be a fruitful area for me to work with using some of my prior determined methods as foundations. I find them very attractive.
You may find this interesting, or just plain weird. A friend of mine had a studio sale to simplify his life, and probably about 100 people came. One fellow came up to me and handed me his card. I don't remember his name, but under it was his "profession": "Refrigerator Developer". The story was that he kept his developer in the fridge, and whenever he loaded a roll of film into a tank, he'd pour the developer into it, put it back in, and leave it for weeks. He described the results. They sounded like fun; lots of Mackie lines, bromide streaks, etc. I've never tried it, but maybe I will! Well, back to topic.
I am new to this forum; I've been avoiding online discussions for some time now for some unknown reason. I am blown away with the incredible knowledge and generosity that I find, nearly every time I log on. This is just absolutely great.
Thanks,
Larry Bullis