Would I be missing anything if I use D-23 instead of D-76?

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xkaes

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Because there is no way to optimize for all the properties above at once, you have to pick the ones that matter most for the scene. That's why sheet film is so attractive. You can make the tradeoff to optimize the things that matter most on an exposure-by-exposure basis.

What you're saying is true, but most photographers that I've encountered, especially novices, assume they want the finest grain -- so they try fine-grain developers, even when they are using fine-grained film. They are "gilding the lily".

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chuckroast

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What you're saying is true, but most photographers that I've encountered, especially novices, assume they want the finest grain -- so they try fine-grain developers, even when they are using fine-grained film. They are "gilding the lily".

And fine grain is typically at the expense of film speed, and more importantly, acutance as your triangle shows.

In "Edge Of Darkness" Barry Thornton does a good job of explaining not only the technical aspects of this, but also how we perceive sharpness and what can be done to enhance this. I also found Ctein's dissertation on sharpness and viewing distance helpful along the way.
 

Donald Qualls

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This is actually true - there was a time when I experienced the use of mechanical typewriter that did not have key presses for 0 and 1. You had to use Os and ls.

Yep. And they didn't erase, either; if you made a mistake on a finish-grade page, you had to toss it out and start over. The typists who could run at 60+ wpm and make no errors on a page always seemed other than human to me.
 

GregY

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This is actually true - there was a time when I experienced the use of mechanical typewriter that did not have key presses for 0 and 1. You had to use Os and ls.
The struggle to type my M.A. thesis was far greater than the uphill battle to make my first acceptable fine print....
 

chuckroast

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Yep. And they didn't erase, either; if you made a mistake on a finish-grade page, you had to toss it out and start over. The typists who could run at 60+ wpm and make no errors on a page always seemed other than human to me.

The struggle to type my M.A. thesis was far greater than the uphill battle to make my first acceptable fine print....

Gads, we're a bunch of old fellas, aren't we.

Some years later, the 0/1 thing was an amusement to us budding computer scientists as we pontificated with undergraduate certainty about a world in which 1s and 0s didn't actually exist. Many years later in grad school, we got to prove that any two distinct symbols would work, not just 0 and 1. It is intuitively true, but we had to do all manner of fancy theorem proving to show exactly why.

Although my education covered analogue, digital hardware, and software, I never forgot the famous Shakespeare quote that has kept me welded to traditional photography:

All the world's a stage, and digital is but a bit player ...
 

GregY

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Gads, we're a bunch of old fellas, aren't we.

Some years later, the 0/1 thing was an amusement to us budding computer scientists as we pontificated with undergraduate certainty about a world in which 1s and 0s didn't actually exist. Many years later in grad school, we got to prove that any two distinct symbols would work, not just 0 and 1. It is intuitively true, but we had to do all manner of fancy theorem proving to show exactly why.

Although my education covered analogue, digital hardware, and software, I never forgot the famous Shakespeare quote that has kept me welded to traditional photography:

All the world's a stage, and digital is but a bit player ...

Love it !
 

Donald Qualls

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Milpool

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Keep in mind with the progress of emulsion technology those Xs have moved around. For example while in ye olde timey days Rodinal was seen to be an acutance developer and fine grain / solvent developers were assumed to be low acutance, things have changed.

What you're saying is true, but most photographers that I've encountered, especially novices, assume they want the finest grain -- so they try fine-grain developers, even when they are using fine-grained film. They are "gilding the lily".

View attachment 399558
 

Donald Qualls

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things have changed.

Indeed. D-76 can be an acutance developer at 1+2 or weaker dilution and with reduced agitation; same is true of Xtol. Be sure to use extra volume at these dilutions, to ensure enough active developer for your film area (100 ml stock per film, minimum, for Xtol, for instance).
 

xkaes

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If there is a speed difference between D-76 and D-23 it is miniscule.

It wasn't minuscule in my film tests -- and here's a current discussion on the same point.

 
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Add some salt (sodium chloride) to D-23 to make Microdol. Results with TMax 100 are virtually grainless (well as grainless as it gets without getting into exotics). Use it 1:3 to retain full film speed, with TMX I find grain at 1:3 and FS to be pretty identical.

Can you help me understand why using D-23 at a 1+3 dilution would "retail full film speed"? How can diluting it even more help it retain speed better? There is a discussion going on about whether there is a significant speed difference between D-23 and D-76, but if speed is something I can adjust with dilution anyway, then maybe the disagreement is a bit academic.
 
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Paul Howell

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I have always found that when using Microdol X I need to shoot about half speed. Never used it with Tmax so maybe with a T grain film full film speed is retained?
 

ags2mikon

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I think that the addition of sodium chloride causes the speed loss. I used Ilford perceptol in different dilutions for about 10 years and I had to make adjustments to my E.I. based upon the dilution. It worked well with some films. D-23 with sodium chloride added is real close to perceptol.
 

xkaes

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I have always found that when using Microdol X I need to shoot about half speed. Never used it with Tmax so maybe with a T grain film full film speed is retained?

My personal tests using D-23 and Microdol-X produced similar results -- both were about one stop slower compared to D-76. I've never bothered to test D-23 or Microdol-X with T-grain film, but since the grain is finer in the film, why bother?
 

Paul Howell

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One of the reason that only a few fine grain developers are on the market is that film grain is go much better than the in the 50 to 70s. Microdol, Edwal 20, Edwal FG7 with sodium sulfite added were all fine grain developers. Photographers Formality still carries a range, their version of Edwal 12, MCM 100, D50 and 23.
 
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