In October of 2014, I mixed up a bag of D-76 that had a use by date of 2008. I split it into three 1/2 gallon bottles, each of them about 2/3 full. These are the brown 'Delta Datatainer' bottles. I keep them on a shelf in a spare bedroom, where ambient temps range from 72°F to 82°F. I have developed approximately 40 rolls of 120, 15 rolls of 35mm, and about 10 sheets of 4x5 in the stock dilution. I then pour it back into whatever container it came out of, and use it again next time.
A couple of times I've increased the developing time by anywhere from 15 to 45 seconds, thinking the developer is getting depleted and the additional time would be needed. But every time I do that, the negatives are too dense for my liking.
So why is my D-76 holding up for so long? Kodak says stock solution is good for about 6 months and/or 16 rolls, but I've nearly tripled the time, and more than tripled the yield. Is Kodak that conservative in their estimates, or is what I am getting typical of D-76?
A couple of times I've increased the developing time by anywhere from 15 to 45 seconds, thinking the developer is getting depleted and the additional time would be needed. But every time I do that, the negatives are too dense for my liking.
So why is my D-76 holding up for so long? Kodak says stock solution is good for about 6 months and/or 16 rolls, but I've nearly tripled the time, and more than tripled the yield. Is Kodak that conservative in their estimates, or is what I am getting typical of D-76?

