Thank you all guys, I'm glad I'm not alone pursuading a new world of B&W these days...
Yes, there are lots to be improved in my processing technique - have learn to avoid water residue on the film (albeit used soap bath at the end - appears to be not enough, or sopa concentration was too weak), some scratches and lots of dust. It appears my bathroom isn't dust-free area for film drying as it may appear...🙂.
BTW, all the scans required little contrast tweakign (Levels) in PS - mostly just slight compression at the dark end of the Histogram. The negs though look good to my untrained to B&W eye.
I'm not sure, but perhaps the grain was a bit more then I'd like in some cases, but I suspect this may come frmo the fact that I'm not used to B&W...🙂
Richard, it was Kodak Tri-X 400 (shot at nominal 400), developed in Kodak HC-110 dillution B (European, i.e. 1:9), developmend for 6.5 minutes (per our fellow charjoncarter experience), fixed in tetenal Superfix Plus dilluted 1:3 for 5 minutes.
I used a water bath for 5 minutes in-between developing and fixing.