SUCCESS!!!
As I speculated in my last post, doing an additional pass through the bleaching steps did reduce the fog. The result was better than I expected!
In the image below:
Bottom-Left: Film went to the fixer without ever being developed. This the base film.
Top-Right: Result after a single pass through the bleaching steps:
Dev 1 ↦ Stop
↦ Bleach ↦ Clear ↦ Ammonia ↦ Wash
↦ Dev 2 ↦ Stop ↦ Fix
Top-Left: Result after a TWO passes through the bleaching steps:
Dev 1 ↦ Stop
↦ Bleach ↦ Clear ↦ Ammonia ↦ Wash
↦ Dev 2 ↦ Stop
↦ Bleach ↦ Clear ↦ Ammonia ↦ Wash
↦ Dev 3 ↦ Stop ↦ Fix
As you can see, the two-pass process gives a fully cleared film, at down to the base fog of the film base as reported by the film that went straight to the fixer.
What I think is happening is that the bleaching step is not reaching 100% of the developed silver. Suppose it "saturates" at (say) 90% capture. If that is more or less what's happening, after you've removed the rehalogenated silver, you have another go at it and capture 90% of what's left.
What do you think?
PS: I do not know whether the middle
Dev 2 ↦ Stop steps are necessary or if you can go from the wash straight to the bleach.
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