I'm resurrecting this thread to engage in a bit of necro-posting because of an experience I just had with LPD.
Due to various personal things keeping me busy I've been sorely limited in darkroom time for more than a year now, and when I have printed I've largely been on a warm tone kick with Ilford MGWT and Harman WT developer. This weekend I was printing and decided that, while the image I was working on was one I had pegged for warm tone, it might look good (and quite different) on a cooler tone and I'd like to compare. This isn't common for me - generally I will look at a given image and decide that it gets printed either warm or neutral (or cool if the new Ilford FB paper works out!)
So I had finished my MGWT prints of this image, put away the WT developer and rinsed the tray, and got out my MCC 110. This excellent paper is very slightly warm of neutral, nothing like MGWT, and goes neutral in selenium but isn't really capable of a true cold or cool tone (I am looking forward to trying the new Ilford FB Cooltone but don't have any, and only have part of an 8x10 25 sheet pack of MGIV FB and I was printing this image from a 6x6 negative at about 10 in. square on 11x14 paper.) I got out my LPD mixed stock solution, glanced at my label saying I had mixed it 5/2012 and briefly thought "nearly a year old, it's probably still fine." Then it hit me - this stuff was nearly TWO years old. I'm sure I printed with it during early 2013 but couldn't recall using it in at least eight or nine months.
Well I have another can of unopened powder but it was already after 11 PM Sunday night and I had to be up at 0600 and there was clearly no time to mix new stock from powder. "WTH," I thought, let's see... poured a bit in a graduate and the color was light amber, a bit darker than fresh mixed but not bad looking at all. Since I wanted a cooler tone AND suspected the developer I mixed up a tray full at 1+1 and tried it with the MCC 110.
Now I don't have comparable prints from fresh developer to compare to in either final result or needed exposure, but the prints look excellent. NO problems at all that I can see. I was able to closely (but not exactly) match the MGWT prints for density and contrast. MGWT, like many WT papers, is a good bit slower than MCC 110 (26 seconds at f/11 for the MGWT, 18 seconds at f/16 for the MCC 110) and there's a bit more than 1/4 grade contrast difference - I printed the MCC 110 with a grade 3 filter and got prints slightly more contasty than a 2.5 on the MGWT, while 2.5 was clearly softer. I think splitting 2/3s of the eposure on grade 3 and 1/3 on 2.5 would have matched extremely close but as I said it was late and Sunday night and I didn't have a lot of time. And of course the speed and contrast differences between two papers are nothing to do with the developers, just mentioned out of interest.
When I have time I'll mix fresh stock. I'm undecided about disposing of the nearly two year old stock on general principle or trying to make comparison prints with fresh stock as an experiment, but I certainly see absolutely nothing wrong with the MCC 110 / LPD prints I made Sunday night.
The stock was stored in the usual Delta brown plastic bottles with the air squeezed out. I had a tiny amount in a quart bottle and the rest came from the other half gallon bottle. (When I mix a fresh gallon it goes in one 1/2 gallon bottle and two quart ones. When both quarts are used up I transfer the half gallon to the quarts. It is much easier to squeeze all but, say, six ounces of air out of a quart bottle than out of a 1/2 gallon one.)
All prints from the sesion are still untoned. The MGWT ones are destined for brown toner, the MCC 110 for 1+19 selenium. They are interesting to compare, and show just how warm MGWT+Harman WT developer actually is, even untoned. It's not so apparent without the comparison print. The Ilford base is also slightly cream or off-white compared to the very bright white base of MCC 110, again something that is far from obvious without direct comparison but very clear looking at the borders of the prints side by side.