To me there are several ways of reformulation. Also several recipes are published. With intensive tests there is indeed a Option to get your own formulation from this simple D23 Basis in regard of your need.For several years I have been using Barry Thornton's Two Bath with good results. I know he lowered the amount of sodium sulfite from 100g to 80g to increase sharpness, and I was wondering what the practical lower limit for the sodium sulfite would be before there was not enough alkalinity to make it active.
How low can you go to max out sharpness and reduce the solvent effect while still having a functioning developer?
Formula:
Bath A
Bath B
- Water 750ml
- Metol 6.5g
- Sodium Sulphite 80g
- Water to make 1 litre
- Water 750ml
- Sodium metaborate 12g
- Water to make 1 litre
Never used it but I do have a formula for a developer that uses 10g of Metol and 50g of Sodium sulphite in 1 liter mixed 1+1 with a solution of 45g of potassium carbonate in 1 liter.For several years I have been using Barry Thornton's Two Bath with good results. I know he lowered the amount of sodium sulfite from 100g to 80g to increase sharpness, and I was wondering what the practical lower limit for the sodium sulfite would be before there was not enough alkalinity to make it active.
How low can you go to max out sharpness and reduce the solvent effect while still having a functioning developer?
Formula:
Bath A
Bath B
- Water 750ml
- Metol 6.5g
- Sodium Sulphite 80g
- Water to make 1 litre
- Water 750ml
- Sodium metaborate 12g
- Water to make 1 litre
Right now I'm using FX37 and Beutler along with my old standby Rodinal.
D23 is derived from Eastman Kodak's very first fine grain developer.
D76 is derived from Wellington and Ward's MQ Borax Fine Grain Developer which has very significantly less Sulphite, so there's room to experiment. Tmax and similar films would be the best choice.
Ian
I have never tried Beutler's with TMY though I use it with excellent success on TMX.I tried Beutler's with TMY and got some intense fogging.
Thanks I remember reading that when you posted. I ran some of my own tests on the BTTB B-Bath where he advocated different amounts metaborate to control contrast. After charting these I found no difference whatsoever in the densities. After much use I am dialed in at 3 min A + 3 min B at 25°C. Great negs every time. I am just trying to wring out a little extra cutting sharpness. Any suggestions?In an earlier thread I was surprised to find 2 bath works with borax in the B bath:
https://www.photrio.com/forum/threa...-re-divided-metol-sulfite-development.106512/
Ian, You seem to know much about this based on your posts. What would you recommend on my questions above? I'd like to use a D23 like formula as a single bath and get something sharper than BTTB, more like Beutler's. Could I reduce the SS and add some borax or metaborate?
If you are planning to do some tests, you might also be interested in a modification that I have seen on German-speaking websites. However, this is not directly related to your question about increasing sharpness.
A photographer called Rüdiger Hartung has claimed that this modified version of BTTB will increase effective speed:
Bath A
3.25 g of Metol
3.35 g Vitamin C (superadditivity with Metol)
0.3 g Phenidone (for the shadows)
Sodium sulphite remains constant at 80 g / liter.
Bad B.
10 g / l Sodium Metaborate.
He has also described doing the sequence Bath A / Bath B / Bath A / Bath B for even more boost to the film's effective speed.
I have only seen smallish examples of his images online but it does seem to promising.
Bests,
David.
www.dsallen.de
Ian, You seem to know much about this based on your posts. What would you recommend on my questions above? I'd like to use a D23 like formula as a single bath and get something sharper than BTTB, more like Beutler's. Could I reduce the SS and add some borax or metaborate?
My inclination is to go with Beutler's which is incredibly sharp. I've never seen fog with it so like Ian I don't know what happened to your film.
You might try to decrease Metol in your first bath, extend the time, then use something stronger in the second bath. There is a reason why developers such as Rodinal are really sharp.
I you will do it like your Avatar is done it will work..Thanks for all of the feedback. I took another look at my Beutler's negative and although the base density is higher than BTTB, it is uniform and the negative appears perfectly printable, almost like Ansel's "pre-flashing" technique. I compared both of these negs at 18” (the largest print I can make without running into the column) and the grain structure was identical. I believe the only real difference is the Beutlers neg has a higher CI and thus looks sharper than the BTTB. I am going to make matching prints using the paper grade to adjust contrast and see what I get.
Thanks I remember reading that when you posted. I ran some of my own tests on the BTTB B-Bath where he advocated different amounts metaborate to control contrast. After charting these I found no difference whatsoever in the densities. After much use I am dialed in at 3 min A + 3 min B at 25°C. Great negs every time. I am just trying to wring out a little extra cutting sharpness. Any suggestions?
Willy Beutler used a formulation wich was indeed different to Tetenal (he was forced to state..)
NEOFIN RED : 0,5 g of methol + 0,5 G of hydroquinone
5g. sodium sulfite
5g sodium carbonate
990 ml. water
with regards
PS : NEOFIN RED is long time discontinued. But perhaps some remember such legend developers :
NEOFIN BLUE
NEOFIN RED
NEOFIN DOKU
Yes - like other derivate formulations from what is said : " nearly the same" it is often more thanIs that in fact Tetenal’s formula for Neofin Red? If so, thanks! I’ve still got Blue and Doku, but haven’t had Red in quite some time. If you know Doku’s formula, please share.
Well I discovered that I had a few bad boxes of TMY. The Beutler's had nothing to do with the fog.I tried Beutler's with TMY and got some intense fogging.
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