Here's the densitometer readings of one of the sheets of film in the spectral scans I posted above. It's for the sheet of TXT320 I developed in PMK 1:2:100. I exposed the sheet under my Saunders 4500 enlarger with a 80A filter over the enlarger lens to convert the color temp of the enlarger light from about 3000K to about 5500K.
I used a Stouffer 21 step 4x5 transmission tablet. Step 2 of my tablet has a density of 0.19 density, and I used a dense part of the middle of the tablet for the B+F exposure. To ensure that I was truely getting no light through the tablet in that region, I placed a strip of silver mylar tape.
Density readings were made with a Noritsu DM-201 color densitometer using Status M filtration and calibrated with a Stouffer transmission calibration film. My understanding is that Status M filters have peak transmission at about 450, 545 and 640 nm for Blue, Green, and Red respectively. The responses are fairly narrow, roughly on the order of 40 nm spectral width. The Noritsu appears to measure the visible somewhere between green and red - I have no info on that.
The sheet I used for the spectral scans had the following Visible (V), Blue (B), Green (G), and Red (R) density readings -
Before bleaching this sheet, it had the following readings -
Unbleached TXT320 4x5 - Step 2 area:
V: 1.62
B: 2.33
G: 1.67
R: 1.52
Unbleached TXT320 4x5 - B+F:
V: 0.10
B: 0.18
G: 0.11
R: 0.08
After Bleaching this sheet, it had the following readings -
Bleached TXT320 4x5 - Step 2 area:
V: 0.13
B: 0.61
G: 0.15
R: 0.07
Bleached TXT320 4x5 - B+F:
V: 0.07
B: 0.13
G: 0.06
R: 0.05
As you can see, there was very little change in the B+F density readings of this film from before bleaching to after bleaching. On average, the bleached film is only 0.04 density readings lower for all channels of the densitometer.
It's been stated in this thread that the color of the stain does not change with stain density. I believe that the data I've presented shows that the "color" does change - actually, it's the saturation of the color that changes.
PMK stain in my experience has a yellowish tint to it. It's not a very strong yellow, but as the stain increases in density, so does the blue absorbance of the stain and hence the amount of yellow increases.
You can see that in the densitometer reading I presented above, as well in the spectral scans I presented. In the spectral scans, the amount of blue absorbance increases faster than the green absorbance. The red absorbance is affected very little by the stain.
For this reason, I figure that the readings made with the red channel with the densitometer are probably very close to representing the actual density that is present from the developed silver in the film alone. If you compare the readings with a non-staining developer, the density on the film can change very little regardless of which channel is used to make the reading. Here's some measurements of an unbleached sheet of TXT320 4x5 that was developed in XTOL 1:1 at the similar density as the sheet above had for visible reading -
V: 1.67
B: 1.72
G: 1.67
R:1.65
As you can see, the XTOL does not cause a large difference in color density readings.
VC papers will be affected by changes in the relative amounts of yellow and magenta filtration that is used on the exposing light source - If you've used a dichroic enlarging head to print VC papers you will agree that small amounts of filtration have have an effect on the contrast of the print. I often use adjustments of 10 or even 5 points of filtration when setting the filter pack for a print.
I think we can all agree that if there is an equal amount of blue and green absorbance in the pyro stain there will be no effect on the VC paper - the paper will see those equal amounts of density as being simple neutral density.
The densitometer readings of the unbleached film on the Step 2 exposure area shows an excess of 0.66 density from the blue and the green channels (2.33B - 1.67G = 0.66B excess). That's quite a large amount of yellow filtration that is being added to the film from the stain. After bleaching, that same film showed 0.46 more blue absorbance than green (0.61B - 0.15G = 0.44B excess ). Even after bleaching, there is a large excess of yellow filtration (or blue absorbance if you like) left in the film.
When I calibrated my Saunders 4500 dichroic enlarging head against my Ilford Multigrade printing filters, this much yellow filtration was equal to about a Grade #1.5 filter. It's a significant change from printing with no added filtration.
And to show that the filtration changes from the shadows in the film to the highlights, looking at the B+F of that sheet, it had a difference between blue to green of 0.07 more blue for the unbleached film (0.18B -0.11G = 0.07B excess), and after bleaching it was still 0.07 more blue (0.13B - 0.06G = 0.07B excess).
So you can see from these measurements, there is yellow filtration being added to the highlight areas of the developed film from the pyro stain that is not present in the B+F or shadow areas. It's this increase in the saturation of the stain that has an effect on VC papers.