I had a professor at Brooks who demonstrated this in the zone system class, much to the astonishment of the class; I'd heard of it before so I got to look smart. I did ask about the silver printing out, it seems that under normal to dim artificial light, no noticable silver would print out in the time in the stop before. He said there was no difference in base fog, and I'm assuming since this was a long time Brooks faculty member, he'd read the negs on a densitometer not just by eye.
PE, I was under the impression that the particular silver created by printing out was subject to bleaching in hypo much more readily than silver created by developing out (more 'fragile' IIRC, is how I've heard it refered). First is this acctually the case (to any degree)? And second, if there's some truth to it would this help counteract any density formed by printing out?
Peter
Every emulsion reacts differently during development with respect to printout. Some become more sensitive to printout and some become less so. The point is that printout ""can" occur.
It is also true that the colloidal silver(s) (plural because they vary with respect to crystal type (bromide, cl/br, br/i and etc)) will be very sensitive to removal by hypo. But, this removal is depenant on the pH of the hypo and is more apt to take place in an acidic hypo than an alkaline hypo.
I have personally seen prints become yellow in hypo if the hypo is nearing exhaustion, a water rinse was used, and the lights were turned on early. Printout and development began anew when the lights went on.
So, your professor was right. Under ideal conditions of fresh stop and fresh acid fix, this should not be a problem, but under other conditions such as a fast developing paper, a strong developer, a water rinse and alkaline fix or weak fix, you get printout or the actual resumption of development.
If you don't believe this, there is another thread here about prints yellowing in the fix if the lights went on too early. It was within the last week.
There is lots more to be said on this subject, but you will not see it if you exercise prudence in use of solutions. (and lights)
PE