Gerald C Koch
Member
When used alone PPD causes a severe loss of film speed and acutance. Because of this another developing agent was added to most formulas, metol, glycin, ... Of course this sort of negates the use of PPD in the first place because the grain is increased again.
Kodak published a formula for a special B/W developer based on CD-3 or CD-4. Its name began with SD rather than just D. Can't remember the number, SD-4?
Probably the best starting point for a CD-3 developer would be the Crawley FX-10 formula.
FX-10 Super Fine-Grain Developer
Diethyl-p-phenylenediamine bisulfite 6.0 g
Sodium sulfite, anhydrous 100 g
Hydroquinone 6.0 g
Borax 4.0 g
Boric acid 4.0 g
Water tp make 1 l
Use full strength
The BJ says develop for 8 min @ 65 F
I would adjust for the difference in MW's, you might have to make a small adjustment in the ratio of borax to boric acid.
Kodak published a formula for a special B/W developer based on CD-3 or CD-4. Its name began with SD rather than just D. Can't remember the number, SD-4?
Probably the best starting point for a CD-3 developer would be the Crawley FX-10 formula.
FX-10 Super Fine-Grain Developer
Diethyl-p-phenylenediamine bisulfite 6.0 g
Sodium sulfite, anhydrous 100 g
Hydroquinone 6.0 g
Borax 4.0 g
Boric acid 4.0 g
Water tp make 1 l
Use full strength
The BJ says develop for 8 min @ 65 F
I would adjust for the difference in MW's, you might have to make a small adjustment in the ratio of borax to boric acid.