Spencer two bath
Paul, are there times listed with Spencer's 2-bath?
Yeah, two minutes per! I used three as a CMA. I wish I had more time to putz with this stuff right now. Stay tuned!
As a side note, some recent thoughts about grain. Most grain is inherently due to the film characteristics. Developers can only modify what is (or isn't!) there. Once upon a time, 35mm film had horrible grain due to the enlargement needed. We've come a long, long way. I would say that today's Tri-X is about the grain of Plus-X when I was a kid, maybe not quite, but almost. So, I don't think the quest for fine grain is as needed as 50 years ago.
OK, off track. Fine grain developers, to over simplify, use components to dissolve the grain filaments as they form. Why do they form? Due to long development times. Why is the development time (relatively) long? Due to low alkalinity of "fine grain" developers.
Now, Spencer's two bath uses a quite alkaline Bath B. Probably with the emulsion saturated with Bath A, the B bath develops in moments in the highlights, longer in the shadows. The highlights are where grain shows the most. If developed in some few seconds, silver filaments never grow much.
Some of Patrick Gainer's developers use healthy amounts of metaborate and have similar pH and give fine grain.
Maybe someday I can run tests. Anyone out there, feel free to run with these thoughts and experiments. Maybe I'm nuts.