Thanks for the replies
Rudeofus
What dyou mean with?
"There is no need to put the clip on the spindle, but make sure you have that black tube in your tank in the correct position, or light will come into the tank through the lid."
I have one of these stainless steel ones. Can´t I open the small lid to pour the liquid in?
Although I´m still not sure as of what to do.
I don´t really have a stock of old films to test with, it was more a case of trying to put something in when I suspect the film might be fogged and then it´s a trial and error. But it might be that 2g/l is the way to go.
If you have no film to test a modified developer with, I'd say leave out the extra restrainer and print/scan through the fog. As I mentioned before, there is no "correct" amount of restrainer for aged film, it is completely up to tests and experimentation.
About the tank&lid: if you were to make tests, you want to use as little film and developer as possible. If you put a test clip onto the spindle of an inversion tank, you'd have to fill that tank with developer, which means 250 ml per test. If you instead put a small test clip onto the bottom of your tank and leave out the spool, you may get away with 50-80 ml of developer per test run. The note about the spindle is specific to plastic tanks: even if you leave out the spool, you must still put the spindle in its place or light will come into your tank. I don't know or use stainless steel tanks, so I can't tell you much about them.
There is one way you could still do tests without sacrificing a whole roll: leave the first few image frames unexposed and use that area, clip by clip, for testing various amounts of KBr.