Hello John,Hi Juan
You will find different opinions I guess. There are people who seem to be Xtol spokespeople here. They believe the developer is the best thing that was ever invented and they get great results. You will also find other people who never really warmed-up to Xtol and would suggest you use another developer, any other developer that doesn't have vitamin c because for the most part they are all similar and Vit c developers seem to be low contrast developers.
If you haven't used it much or at all I would not process anything of importance in it unless you have used it ( or any developer for that matter ). its a shame to take advice, get very excited and have it not work out with film that "mattered"
Best of luck !
John
Would we agree about Xtol being the best possible developer in my case?
My case:
Only ISO400 film, and only at EI640, and in 35mm only.
I have tested several developers for this precise case, with TX, HP5+ and TMY. With some rudeness I can say TX is slower -in practice- than HP5+ and TMY, and HP5+ is grainier than TMY-2, so basically TMY-2 is the best ISO400 film.
So, not at EI200 for ultrafine grain development, nor at EI1600 for speed enhancing developers, but precisely at EI640 (very mild push), I've got the best results, for wet printing, using standard developers... D-76 1+1 is the one I've used the most. But I think Xtol, being a little sharper and a bit faster, and also controlling grain very well, seems the best possible option... Would you agree?
I like the tone of TMY-2 in FX-39 II very much, but grain is very present in 35mm, although beautiful in medium format...
Would you say there's a better developer, for 35mm ISO400 at EI640, than Xtol?
Hello John,
I used Xtol twice in the past. I was going to test it precisely for EI640, but my recent bag for that was bad, underdeveloping, so I decided to wait.
I imagine that slight flatness for soft light can be of help in my case because of the mild push...
But I wonder what will be better for 35mm thinking of stock, diluted or replenished developer, and considering TMY and no other films.
I would agree with XTOL or D-76 being the best possible developers in any case.
Thank you, Michael, for both answers.The differences in speed between stock and 1+3, if any, are negligible.
This might be a good time to say that this applies pretty well to general purpose developers. In terms of real emulsion speed, changing the dilution of a developer will not give anywhere near the speed differences often talked about. Even 1/3 stop would represent a fairly extreme case, and that certainly will not happen with XTOL etc. Small fraction of a stop at best, and easily within the margin of measurement error.
Once I saw wet prints from Xtol Stock, 1+1 and 1+2 for the same scene, and sharpness seemed to be the same too...
Adrian, I remember you not being impressed with DD-X, which supposedly is a consumer version of DD.
What changed?
The differences in speed between stock and 1+3, if any, are negligible.
This might be a good time to say that this applies pretty well to general purpose developers. In terms of real emulsion speed, changing the dilution of a developer will not give anywhere near the speed differences often talked about. Even 1/3 stop would represent a fairly extreme case, and that certainly will not happen with XTOL etc. Small fraction of a stop at best, and easily within the margin of measurement error.
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