You´re misunderstanding me if you think I am calling everybody ignorant. The problem I am trying to address is that if you read all these forums, the results are all over the place and it must be very confusing for someone trying to make heads or tails out of the information.
There is a reason why people get different results with the same developer. It is because everybody has a different process. It starts with the exposure (ISO, accuracy of meter, method of metering, subject contrast etc.) and then there is the development (time, temperature, water quality, agitation, even the rinsing temperature is of importance), finally there is the printing (condenser or diffuser head, paper, quality of filters for variable hardness paper) or the way you scan (type of scanner, software). The list goes on and on and on.
My point is that with any combination of film and developer, it is possible to make huge modifications to the characteristic curve and you can get almost whatever you want.
Many great photographer just shoot Tri-X and develop in HC-110. For example: Michael Kenna, Bruce Barnbaum and Anton Corbijn. The quality of a photographs mainly come from gesture, mood, emotion etc.
i agree with what you have said in this post that basically times and temps are a startingpoint because
everything else is a variable that is different with every person ( have posted the same thing more or less many times )
forget about printing or the enlarger/light source ..
that's another kettle of fish...
but you were posting this RIGHT AFTER i posted about iused xtol and it just didn't work .. &c so i figured you were
suggesting *I* was ignorant. i am ignorant about a lot of stuff but not using a plain vanilla developer like xtol .. should have worked like a walk in the park ...
what a beginner should take from threads like this are for most people developers work great, all of them
but for some people they have to use something else.
i for years have used ansco 130 as a film developer .. yes i know, its a paper developer but it works ( like dektol ) for films too.
i gave them dilutions and developing times but what works GOLD for me, worked LEAD for them .. because of everyting you have mentioned
all or some ... its all a starting point, that is what people should take from discussions like this, not stand developing or rotary processing or hyper dilute boiling hot developer .. just
that if used like the instructions say on the package, ( dilution + time + box speed+camera that shutter isn't wonky+ meter isn't wonky +standard temp + standard agitation ) negatives should come out OK
and maybe ( or maybe not ) need a little tweaking ...
it doesnt' matter the ingredients sodium sulfite metol HQ glycin coffee urine favabeans garbonzobeans rosemary beer redline .. if you follow directions most of hte time things work out.
i almost forgot
YMMV