I´m interested in knowing where this comes from.
I will give you two reasons:
It's cheap and it's Kodak, so widely available almost everywhere.
I´m interested in knowing where this comes from.
I´m interested in knowing where this comes from.
I´m interested in knowing where this comes from.
Camera stores. I use one of our sponsors: FreeStyle.
I hope that helps.
Steve
I think he means the thought process to decide on Xtol.

I think he means the thought process to decide on Xtol.

Yes, that was what I meant. Sorry, if I said it unclearly.
AFAIK Ian, that developer and the Rollei RLS (Rollei Low Speed) developer are one and the same product. There is a review of this developer by Erwin Putts using Kodak T-Max 100 and Ilford Delta 100. The exposure index ratings are based on incident readings with a Gossen Mastersix from correspondence with the author.Was the formula for CG-512 ever published ?
Ian
What I am missing in A49 is the sharpness.
I recently tested Perceptol, the developer that is said most similar to Microdol-X, vs A49 with Tmax 400 (TMY-2)...
Did you use the Perceptol full strength or diluted? I'd expect the results to be quite different one way or the other.
Xtol pretty well replaced Microdol-X before Microdol-X was discontinued. The grain is more obvious, but Xtol is also sharper.
Maybe you speak for undiluted solutions, but I can´t imagine that results change this way with different dilutions.Hello Folks, it appears that my favorite film developer, Microdol-X, is going by the wayside, if it hasn't already gone. Does anyone know of any similar developers? Does Photographers' Formulary offer one? I checked on their website, and there is no mention of any.
I suppose I can switch, but I would prefer not to. Any help, commiseration, or just plain sympathy would be welcome.
Cheers,
-- Mark
Maybe you speak for undiluted solutions, but I can´t imagine that results change this way with different dilutions.
Yes they change. Diluted developer contains much less sulphite. Sulphite solves back silver an reduces grain and sharpness as well. If you dilute a sulphite-rich dev you get more sharpness and more grain.
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