This thread continues to hold a horrible fascination. I can think of one circumstance in which it is reasonable, and one in which it may be desirable, not to use stop bath with film. I’m sure both must already have been covered in the preceding 46 pages of replies. The first is when the developer is very dilute or is being used in a 2-bath system - in these cases there is almost nothing to stop, and further dilution does the job effectively. The second is when the developer contains a strong alkali, such that a violent reaction with the acid stop might damage the emulsion - this has been claimed to cause pinhole defects. I can’t think of a good reason not to use stop bath in other circumstances, but dissenters may well get away with it and have nice negatives to show you!
Thank you for responding to my post. Unfortunately, you did not address any of the issues I raised. Which makes me wonder why you responded to my post.
As for very dilute developers, I am only familiar with Rodinal and staining developers. Agfa recommends using a stop bath for all of its developers. The staining developers I am familiar with recommend using an alkali stop bath or water.
As for two bath developers, for example Barry Thornton's two-bath developer, the instructions say not to use stop bath, so unless someone just likes being perverse, no one uses stop bath.
As for alkali developers, which ones did you have in mind? I'll be happy to look them up and report back. We could start with the alkali developers you regularly use?
I don't approach film processing as an activity for seeing what I can "get away with." Nor do I understand the obsession with saving a nickel. The "dissenters" all seem to have a plethora of cameras and lenses, and are always on the look out to acquire more.
You were talking about negatives, so did you mean ‘Show me your negatives?’
I do not ask people to show me their negatives. The object of photography is not to create negatives. They are simply an intermediate step. I don't care what anyone's negatives look like. I have never seen anyone's negatives outside the classroom, or occasionally when some self-appointed expert does a show and tell on YouTube. I am interested in what my negatives look like.
I am interested in what people do. I am more interested in why people to do it. Only then can I decide whether to follow their lead.
I don't why you think the fascination this subject evokes is "horrible." It is merely an exploration of human nature. As are most of the threads on this forum.