So D 76 and Rodinal, Dk 50, Pyro, Buetler are common and are older than MCM 100, what are modern developers?
Good one Paul! That ought to get some heads scratched.So D 76 and Rodinal, Dk 50, Pyro, Buetler are common and are older than MCM 100, what are modern developers?
I'm curious, what has changed with film that makes these developing agents less relevant?
Good one Paul! That ought to get some heads scratched.
Jerry,Modern developers containing a phenidone or a derivative like Domezone or replacing hydroquinone with ascorbic acid.
A metol based developer is going to be a tad sharper than a phenidone one. This is due to the fact that phenidone is not as sensitive to bromide buildup and its envolventment with edge effects is less striking.
I don't want this thread to decay into something like "my developer is better than your developer." I have stated two reasons why PPD is a poor choice for today's emulsions. Feel free to look up this developing agent in Haist, Mason, or Glakides. A "great" developer is not being withheld from the masses by the cognoscenti. It is situations like this when The Darkroom Cookbook and PF annoy me. They appear to give credence to the idea that these old developers are useful.
I totally agree Paul and I'm rather fond of Edwal 12 myself. Is it better than Xtol or HC-110? Nope! But it gives a different look that's for sure. Whatever floats your boat I guess!These old developers are useful to me, MCM 100, Edwal 12, 20, and 777 provide a look that I find appealing. I don't think one developer is is more less useful than another, just different. Some take more work that others, some are more environmentally friendly that others, some more or less toxic, but all useful under the right circumstances.
Could be any number of things that wiped out many of these old brews Jerry. Keeping quality, ease of use, toxicity, availability, marketing, competition or probably just to darn many developers on the market for the amount of users. Many of these developers weren't even available to me when my, well supplied, local photo store was still in business. Now, it's a matter of hunting up a recipe and doing it yourself. Another good example would be printing papers. Kodak made some of, if not the best, photo printing paper. Where is it? Agfa, where is it? Does that mean just because it doesn't exist anymore that is was inferior to the new stuff? I absolutely loved Ilfords Cibachome/Ilfochrome printing materials, but can only dream now. I know that Cibachrome printing was the ultimate for me, but it doesn't exist so it couldn't have bee any good.There is a question that I like to put forward to those who cannot live without these old developer formulations. If they were so good why did they fall from favor? Why aren't they at least as popular as D-76 today?
Could be any number of things that wiped out many of these old brews Jerry. Keeping quality, ease of use, toxicity, availability, marketing, competition or probably just to darn many developers on the market for the amount of users. Many of these developers weren't even available to me when my, well supplied, local photo store was still in business. Now, it's a matter of hunting up a recipe and doing it yourself. Another good example would be printing papers. Kodak made some of, if not the best, photo printing paper. Where is it? Agfa, where is it? Does that mean just because it doesn't exist anymore that is was inferior to the new stuff? I absolutely loved Ilfords Cibachome/Ilfochrome printing materials, but can only dream now. I know that Cibachrome printing was the ultimate for me, but it doesn't exist so it couldn't have bee any good.
Jerry, I understand where you are coming from, but you have to understand where some of us are coming from, as to "our" tastes. Some people like coffee, some folks like tea! Both are good, but taste different.
MCM-100 uses PPD in a superadditive combo with Catechol, so most of this doesn't apply to MCM-100.
This, on the other side, is quite relevant to MCM-100, and everyone should make a conscious decision whether some possible small pictorial improvements are worth the risk dealing with PPD. From what I read it goes right through skin, so the typical "well, I won't eat it then" precaution will not suffice.
There is a question that I like to put forward to those who cannot live without these old developer formulations. If they were so good why did they fall from favor? Why aren't they at least as popular as D-76 today?

So Rodinal, D76 are obsolete and we should only use Xtol or other similar formula?
I agree with this statement, since it is exemplified here in the following quote:The term super-additive is mentioned from time to time. The problem is that most people do not understand what the term means.
Many so called primary development agents are self restraining, i.e. they stick to silver and/or silver halide in their oxidized state and are only slowly scavenged (e.g. PPD and derivatives, Metol), or not at all (e.g. Phenidone). Most secondary development agents have very long induction times and develop only at very high pH, e.g. Catechol, Pyrogallol, Hydroquinone, Ascorbate and HQMS.Only the total development time has changed. NOTHING ELSE ABOUT THE DEVELOPMENT HAS CHANGED. The densitiy and contrast of the negatives is uneffected. The speed of the reaction was changed BUT not its outcome. Chemistry rules! Once again there is nothing magical about a super-additive combination.
Used together in a superadditive combo they are a completely different animal, they develop at pH in which secondary development agent alone would be mostly inactive, and with very different pictorial properties in every respect. You can not explain the working of Xtol or DS-10 by simply extrapolating from POTA and a low pH Ascorbate only developer.
As obvious from the above mechanism, developing agent with very stable semiquinone radical form (the first oxidized form of the ETA) tends to make more superadditive combination. Also obvious from the above mechanism is that Agent 1 has to have an intermediate reduction potential in the developer solution between the Fermi energy level of silver (the developing image silver) and the reduction potential of Agent 2 in the developer solution.
It is all about kinetics. The rate of development changes but not the ultimate product. It is still the same two developing agents with their reduction potentials creating a silver image.
There isn't really more that that in Haist.
Perhaps if nothing was written, I've come up with some new things(just kidding). In the experiments I ran with Dimezone-S, before I worked with ascorbates I used more traditional hydroxybenzenes (specifically HQ and pyrogallol). I got very similar macro-sensitometry to the later ascorbate experiments using the types of ratios I referred to above so perhaps Phenidones are the outlier when it comes to ratios only being about kinetics. For a commercial example of what I "came up with", Kodak's last version of Technidol use this type of mechanism to get very low overall contrast without massive losses in emulsion speed, using a Phenidone and HQ, likely in the kind of "reversed" ratio I experimented with.
I didn't experiment with metol in this case since it was really the wrong agent to start with for what I was going for. But even in the case of metol, I wonder if there's more than just kinetics when it comes to SA. I've thought of a few experiments but never did them.
Well Paul, I think I'd dump my tank after I ran out of replenisher. If it were me? I'd also try mixing my own with Kodaks CD2 color developer component in place of PPD. I did this for my batch of Edwal 12 and it works just fine. Your new "homemade" MCM 100 will be much less than $80.00 to boot. You might want to do this while you still have your batch of MCM 100 so you can compare your home-brew to the MCM 100 you are using now. I would have to look at my notes, but I think I ran the CD2 at double what the Edwal 12 called for for PPD. Of course all this is meaningless if you want to just switch to one of the new "WONDER" developers.By the way, my original question: best way to replenish MCM 100? I have dumping a quart and adding a quart to a gallon of stock MCM 100 every 12 rolls of 35mm 36 ex or same square inches of MF and LF , my tank is now well over a year old. At point should I start a new tank? Saying this may be my last tank as a gallon of MCM 100 is now around $80.
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