Vaughn
Subscriber
1) Because stop bath for film is not critically needed for excellent results.Why?
2) One less (potentially hazardous) chemical to have around students in a tight place.
3) Simplified the process; one less chemical to go accidentally back in the wrong bottle, one less chemical to have ready in a graduate cylinder in a small room with people all around you, etc..
4) Since no one used stop bath and all stopped with water the same way every time, results were consistent
5) With 125 students, fixer quickly was quickly exhausted, not concerned about developer carry-over (three fill of dev tank with water before fix.)
It was done for decades, starting in the 50s when the photo program started as the third photo program to be under an university art dept in the USA. I took my first class in 1977 as a non-art major, graduated in 1981 (BS in Natural Resources Mgt), volunteered in the darkroom for ten years while working seasonally for the US Forest Service, then worked as the darkroom manager/tech for 20+ years.
PS -- we had a separate room for 4x5 film development, using SS racks and tanks. We used stop in there -- one reason was that going from tank to tank, with the middle one being the stop, was more efficient/safer that trying to use running water in the dark.
PSS -- my 120 negatives from 1977 still look great (well, not neccesarily all the images )

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