Wow hey Patrick still kickin' around I see...I remember your posts on rec.photo.darkroom (or was that photo.net) way back in the day...Long ago acquaintance of Richard Knoppow who taught me everything I ever needed to know about Kodak
How's your Vitamin C level doing these days
Anyhow, thanks for the chemistry breakdown.
So the color output (purple'ish) even on a regular rodinal development is not that p-aminophenol.
The resulting negatives from such long development come out beautiful, printable, and rich in tone. I cannot easily replicate this tone and richness with short developing. OTOH, I can easily duplicate my efforts by long non-agitated stands (contrary to some thoughts).
One thing is for sure- any film from tmax to apx to plusx will all stain a light purple if I stand develop them for more than one hour. I suppose all I'm really doing is toning and developing at the same time
P.S. I'm using purified water for development which who really knows what it's filtering and not filtering..talk is cheap.
Thanks Patrick.
Although the HCl comes into Rodinal when it is made, it does not survive the contact with KOH or NaOH. The end product is sodium or potassium aminophenolate and KCl or NaCL, not p-aminophenol.HCl. I don't know if this bit of trivia has anything to do with the phenomenon at hand. With 8 hours development in a developer that is almost potable, who knows what might have come in with the water of dilution?