Questions to the knowledgeable ones, after doing a little homework.
- pH. Fixers for C-41 are specified having a pH 7.5...7.8, while rapid fixers for B&W are specified pH 5.0...5.5. What are the trade-offs? Acid fixer, that I used so far, allows me (after a brief dip in acid stop) to turn the lights on as soon as the test strip is in the fixer. Neutral fixer will require a longer (30s??) stay in the stop bath. OTOH, neutral fixer is expected to be odorless. Any other trade-offs that i should know of?
What you think is "fixers for C-41" usually turns out to be "replenisher concentrate for C-41 fixer". Since speed is king in commercial C-41 processing, these machines typically go directly from acidic bleach (well buffered at pH 4.2-5) to fixer, carrying over quite a bit of acidity, therefore the replenisher has to be a bit on the alkaline side to keep the tank at target pH 6.5.
If you mix fixer just from this "fixer replenisher concentrate", your fixer will be at the pH both
@koraks and you reported. The fixer itself will work just as well at pH 7.5, but Ammonia smell isn't all that great in open tray processing. There is absolutely no point in buying fixer starter for B&W processing, just add a few dashes of something acidic until the Ammonia smell is gone.
- Durability. C-41 fixer is generally sold in a pack of 5L concentrate. I'm a relatively low volume user. How long will the stock fixer keep before it sulfurs out?
It will not sulfur out. Unlike its acidic peers it will not leak out Sulfur Dioxide, its pH will not go down over time. You can measure its life span in multiple years, and even if you throw half of it away it will be cheaper than typical B&W rapid fixers. If you are a really low volume user, there are are neutral fixers marketed for B&W, and they typically come in 1 liter bottles.
Regarding speed of action: don't get hung up on fixer speed, look for washing speed, that's where you can save time and water. PE was enthusiastic for neutral fixers mostly for their washing speed.