The Polydol that I use is new old stock, packaged in a can with a net weight of 1 pound. The brownish image tone makes it better and gives a brilliant contrast and a wide tonal range, than some of your typical developers with the flat or charcoal type of image tone on its processed negatives. As with Ruth Leach, she told me to add Sodium Carbonate to the Microdol-X from Kodak to bring its PH balance up to Polydol's PH.
In my years of experience, film developers that use P-Methylaminophenol Sulfate (aka Elon or Metol) as its primary developing agent, it will produce negatives with that brown image tone which gives a better printing contrast and a wide tonal range that meets the naked eye. A few Metol-Quinone developers will do this as well, but not as well as with the Metol exclusive based developers, such as D-23, DK-20, D-25, Microdol, Microdol-X, and Polydol.
When I mix Microdol-X, it has a slight Peach/Light Tan color; if not, clear like water. When I mix the Polydol, it is a bright yellow color, like HC-110 Dilution B, whereas the coloring looks identical to Lemonade!
Another note on those Metol/Elon exclusive developers. Those developers yield a wide forgiveness range with overexposures, as it will not block or bleach out the highlights as with other developers. As long as you don't water Microdol-X by diluting it, Microdol-X gives a one stop loss in film speed, which means that whatever film that you shoot, you must shoot that film at ½ of that film's ASA/ISO rating. If you want full film speed with Microdol-X, then you dilute that developer 1:3, and it has a 1/4 stop overexposure forgiveness, but with longer development times.
The only developer that mimics Microdol-X today is Ilford's Perceptol. However, it uses Phenidone instead of Elon/Metol (p-methylaminophenol sulfate). It doesn't give that really unique brownish image tone that acts as a developed-incorporated filter like Microdol-X and Metol/Elon developing agent exclusive developers do. Prints from these negatives are not flat, but produces pure blacks, pure whites and EVERY shade of grey in between. The DK-50 achieves that, and now, Kodak discontinued the DK-50 back in 2012. These discontinued developers work far better than these new brews that they keep on coming up with!
In most cases that I've also experienced, the developer you use will determine your film speed and how you expose your film, which is why many film manufacturers today use E.I. (Exposure Index) instead of the typical ASA/ISO ratings.