Welcome back! I was starting to wonder, if you got frustrated and left!! If you are being assisted and taught by an old darkroom guy, maybe newbie like me should not try to advise you.
It just seems to me you are doing a lot of work just to print B&W. I use Ilford multi-grade filters. I don't know if this is an option for you with your enlarger. If I want to increase or decrease contrast, I just put in different filter. #2 being the normal one, #3 higher contrast, #1 lower contrast, etc. They are calibrated so the development time does not change until I get to 3 1/2. Then it doubles. It's really an easy and reliable system.
What it really does is... highlight stays the same and shadow becomes lighter or darker, hence changing the overall contrast of the print.
Anyway, welcome back. I hope you got your chemical "thing" sorted out.... (and I hope you are not using D76 for paper)
It just seems to me you are doing a lot of work just to print B&W. I use Ilford multi-grade filters. I don't know if this is an option for you with your enlarger. If I want to increase or decrease contrast, I just put in different filter. #2 being the normal one, #3 higher contrast, #1 lower contrast, etc. They are calibrated so the development time does not change until I get to 3 1/2. Then it doubles. It's really an easy and reliable system.
What it really does is... highlight stays the same and shadow becomes lighter or darker, hence changing the overall contrast of the print.
Anyway, welcome back. I hope you got your chemical "thing" sorted out.... (and I hope you are not using D76 for paper)
