Any reason to drop a batch of reuse-fixer 'early' and mix both from scratch again? Isn't the point of the first bath to ensure greater and more reliable usage of all of your fixer by depleting the active chemistry of the older fixer with a first-stage bath so that less chemistry usage is needed when it hits the fresher second stage bath?
First, remember that with two-bath fixing, it is bath one that is the older, more exhausted bath. Bath two is the fresh, newer, more active one.
When using two-bath fixing, the second bath doesn't do the lion's share of the fixing; that happens in bath one. However, it does do some, especially as bath one is approaching the end of its useful life. So a buildup of dissolved silver does occur. Plus, there is a certain amount of dissolved silver that gets carried over from fix one. When fix two gets moved to the fix one position, then, it's not 100% fresh. Over a few cycles of this, fix one is doing less and less of the total work (it is progressively more exhausted), and bath two accrues more and more dissolved silver. At some point, the second bath has too much silver in it to effectively function as bath one anymore, at which point we need to replace it as well. Kodak recommends no more than seven cycles of replacing bath one with bath two. I like five cycles or fewer, out of an abundance of caution.
A quick note on fixer capacity and permanence: Although manufacturers state that xx prints can be run through a liter of fixer, the number we usually see is for "general purpose" or "commercial use," not for "optimum permanence" or "archival processing."
If you read the Ilford data sheet on their fixers, the capacity is given as 40 8x10 prints per liter. But, if you read more carefully in the section on silver concentration, you'll find that that capacity is for "commercial use." For "maximum stability" or "optimum permanence" the capacity is only
Ten 8x10s per liter. With one bath fixing, then, you'd be discarding bath one every ten prints if you're interested in optimum permanence.
With two-bath fixation, you can run 40 8x10s through a liter of bath one, then transfer to bath two and get the same or better fixation as the 10th sheet through a one-bath-fixation regime. You've doubled your fixer capacity even if you discard both baths. If you promote bath two to bath one, your saving even more. The two-bath-fixing regime is more about ensuring adequate fixing for optimum permanence than for economy. Still, it's more economical too.
Additionally, we need to keep an eye on the age of the fixer; fixer needs to be replaced at the end of its shelf-life regardless of the throughput. Fixer in an open tray lasts about 7 days; in a half-full bottle about a month; six months in a full, tightly-capped bottle.
Best,
Doremus