One of the reasons I advocate use of a stop bath is that it is less likely to be used incorrectly than water.
An effective water stop needs to employ flowing water or several changes of fresh water - not just a dunk in water and then off to the fixer.
For those of us with experience doing this stuff, and know how to properly employ a water stop, the results are probably interchangeable - save some possible saving on fixer.
For those beginners who are trying to learn from instructions and the internet, the manufacturer's recommendations which recommend stop bath make more sense.
And of course, while methods that are designed for commercial labs may be more than necessary when employed by a small volume user, if they are simple and easy to employ - as stop bath is - they make a lot of sense.
An effective water stop needs to employ flowing water or several changes of fresh water - not just a dunk in water and then off to the fixer.
For those of us with experience doing this stuff, and know how to properly employ a water stop, the results are probably interchangeable - save some possible saving on fixer.
For those beginners who are trying to learn from instructions and the internet, the manufacturer's recommendations which recommend stop bath make more sense.
And of course, while methods that are designed for commercial labs may be more than necessary when employed by a small volume user, if they are simple and easy to employ - as stop bath is - they make a lot of sense.