Edward Weston's negatives are still being printed today and they are all Pyro negatives, I doubt many other peoples negatives get printed as much. So I think the stain fading issue isn't a worry.
I think we may be over-looking something Hydroquinone is used as the sole developing agent in some older warmtone paper developers, the warmer the tone the finer the grain, Pyrocatechin on its own is also used in fine grain film developer. Now I've never seen a fine grain film developer with just Hydroquinone (it's only used on it's own in high contrast film developers), it's not as active as Pyrogallol or Pyrocatechin.
But at the dilutions of say D177 how grainy will the results be from Pyrogallol on it's own, Kodak give two dilutions one works out at 0.91gm/litre Pyrogallol the other for softer negatives 0.45g/l.
Ian
I think we may be over-looking something Hydroquinone is used as the sole developing agent in some older warmtone paper developers, the warmer the tone the finer the grain, Pyrocatechin on its own is also used in fine grain film developer. Now I've never seen a fine grain film developer with just Hydroquinone (it's only used on it's own in high contrast film developers), it's not as active as Pyrogallol or Pyrocatechin.
But at the dilutions of say D177 how grainy will the results be from Pyrogallol on it's own, Kodak give two dilutions one works out at 0.91gm/litre Pyrogallol the other for softer negatives 0.45g/l.
Ian

