OK you win, Rodinal is the best developer ever and any film, were it pulled, pushed, exposed at its speed box, classic emulsion, delta one, everything in Rodinal !
It's not about winning, it's about having a balanced opinion, Rodinal is not a panacea but also it is far from the "massive grain, blocked shadows, and blown highlights" meme you continually suggest in every thread that mentions it.
I certainly never suggested Rodinal was 'the best ever developer' but you certainly continue to 'push' the massive grain etc. at any opportunity.
It's about being balanced, you come across as a four legs good, two legs bad kind of guy.
Developers like cameras, cars and any other product have good and bad characteristics- there is no panacea, especially not D76 which although is a good standard developer is not the best at anything.
I can show you dozens of scans of negatives developed in T-Max Dev. or D76 or Ilfotec which will look the very same as yours on a screen.
I can also show you excellent results I got with Rodinal.
This doesn't prove anything. And I don't have any "method problem".
Which is my point, you'll see very little difference between Rodinal and other developers grain wise at less that 12-16x enlargement, it doesn't give blocked shadows and blown highlights, if you get blocked shadows or blown highlights you certainly have a very bad methodology.
If you like high acutance and very visible grain, if you expose for what you will develop (highlights or shadows), if you shoot landscapes or still life objects (ala Ralph Gibson), if you use a MF camera or larger, Rodinal is perfect.
High acutance and visible grain are not necessarily down to exposure, which governs shadow and highlight detail. Acutance comes from development and is made by separation in fine detail due to promotion of adjacency effects; acutance developers provide the right formula for the promotion of the Kostinsky effect and the resulting Mackie lines.
If you mainly shoot iso 400 films at box speed in 35mm cameras, this is another story.
If you mainly shoot ISO 400 films at 'box' you will see little difference between D76 1:1 and Rodinal. Neither are full speed developers, neither are fine grain D76 is a 'average' developer that is OK at most things but master of none, Rodinal does at lest provide better tonal separation especially in the mid-upper highlights.
Saying that most people under normal conditions and magnifications be able to tell the negatives apart.
What I'm pointing out to you is your continued almost weekly assertion that Rodinal gives poor results with 'huge' grain poor shadow detail and blown highlights is not the truth.
If you get those results then you have serious errors in you workflow, but please don't blame your developer.