clayne, please
calm down. I don't mean to offend, and i'm not saying a scanner isn't wonderful
but the question arose over developers, which led to optical printing and scanning
if you scan on a high quality, pro-sumer scanner (like you are using, and like the one i own)
there isn't much difference between developers, in fact, some film/developer combinations which produce less than admirable optical prints do wonderfully well for scanners .. and vice versa
i brought up 'rodinal and tri-x and grain'... because it is about the coarsest grain stucture going,
and yet it is unscannable while it is very easy to print sharply...(it looks like 0000 rapidograph stippling, and now you know how old i am !) if you can't resolve the incredibly coarse grain from rodinal and tri-x, how can you resolve the remarkable fine and smooth grain of xtol ? the scanner can't resolve it because it can't see it.
again, it was not to offend, but to offer that how a film prints and how it scans are different.. and looking at a scan has no bearing on how it will print !
the point of THAT was to suggest that what is so good about XTOL, and other developers, and films for that matter,
is normally taken to mean how well they print optically. For scanning, it is hard to beat Ilford XP2, but for stuff you do your self, you should see Sandy King's article, and discussions about Diafine. Really great for scanning.
As for my OWN experience, well, that is not germane to the discussion.