audadvnc wrote: The stuff sold in the yellow bags nowadays is different from the original formula, and more closely resembles D-76d, which is slightly lower contrast, and produces results rather close to D-96 (although they are not the same formula).
I used D76 as well as D76d made from the published formulas as well as Kodaks packaged D76. In practice the difference between D76 (as published) and D76d/Kodaks D76 is about 10-20% in development time. Other than that D76d/Kodak D76 has a lot better keeping qualities which are about the differences worth mentioning.
Angus wrote:But hey...what do I know...I didn't visit a dentist for 16 years and when I finally went (to hold the wife's hand as she's afraid of them) he said..."if all my customers were like you I'd be out of a job. Apart from needing a little cleaning your teeth are prefect".
Pretty much reverse here. Lots of people told me in the past to go see a dentist because of my teeth being chequered all over in white and brownish yellow, but that's because I was given adult doses of fluoride pills when I was little.
I suppose some dentists would like to shoot pictures of my whole face to proof my teeth are actually human, like in that one Married with childrens episode...
Currently trying to bleach them with one of those bleaching toothpastes you can get, but it only results in the white spots disappearing, leaving only the brownish yellow.
"Mama don't take my Kodachrome away!" -
Paul Simon
Chosen tools of the trade: Bauer S209XL, Revue Sound CS60AF, Canon 310XL
The Beatles split up in 1970; long live The Beatles!