The problem I've had with Rodinal in rotary processing is that I get negatives that are over-developed with very high contrast, even at short developing times. It is a very powerful developer that rewards changes in agitation, and I suspect that with the extremely vigorous agitation that rotary processing gives, you'd have to exhaust the Rodinal in order to give any control.
I could be wrong, but I tried many dilutions, couldn't get it to work. So I tried Pyrocat and HC-110. Much better.
Anyway, I don't do rotary development anymore as I gave up sheets, and the results I get with rolls in stainless steel daylight tanks and manual agitation are much more to my liking. Plus the control I get with agitation makes it a more useful tool for the way I shoot.
Thanks to ic-racer for posting those items.
- Thomas
I use the same developers, HC110 and 510 pyro, for all my film. I generally use a semi stand for 120 Tri-x 400 and rotary processing for 4x5 HP-5.
The only difference is I've tested for the correct development time for each process to place zone VIII on the negative as a zone VIII on the print.
I'm not sure why you'd need a different developer for each type of processing, at least not for 510 pyro and HC110.
Mike