XTOL doesn't really have any serious sudden death issues other than being attentive to not let it become grossly exposed to air. This horse has been beaten to death over and over and people still think it will fail on them in 2 weeks.
Thank you,
that is so true... you can identify untalented craftsmen easily: they complain about tools and material instead of improving their methods.
Every time someone has a problem developing a film properly with one developer he will try the next film and/or developer.
But if he used XTol the first thing he does is posting a new question "did my XTol turn bad?" in several forums, and then people who never used it repeat that nonsense.
Maybe he were better off by contemplating about questions like:
- "What is a thermometer good for?"
- "Why should I read the datasheets?"
As the newspaper people say: you can not print excuses instead of a great photo.
But so many people are easy prey for providers that promise heaven on earth with their miracle films and miracle developers. Even the CEOs of such companies put their trousers on one leg at a time and offer other companies' products with a lot more marketing bla, new labels and twice the price. Only the customer's self-deception helps them getting away with it.
May I suggest: buy original films from the manufacturers and don't fall for false labeling, use the recommended chemistry, RTFM and work exactly as described. If the results are not good, don't blame it on the manufacturer in the first line.
There is no liquid XTOL. There is Ilford DD-X that will cost you twice as much for the same amount of working solution. This is fairly stupid as you only need a bucket, water, and 10 minutes to make liquid XTOL from powder. After that you put it in containers and it's a done deal.
Exactly. Liquid XTol is what you make yourself. It's reliable, dirt cheap, more eco-friendly than most other developers, and it's great for pushing.