Photo Engineer
Subscriber
Paul;
I'm sure it works, but I suggest you look for the following:
1. Premature dye fade, especially in older negative films made before ~2002.
2. Mold or fungus growth on negatives.
3. High grain, reduced color saturation and high contrast compared to commercially processed negatives.
#3 is the biggest immediate problem, as that Blix will have trouble removing all of the Silver metal in all films. BTDT! I ran Silver analyses on films processed in Blixes like that. Even a few milligrams of Silver per square foot causes image degradation.
Back in the 60s, we could not get NH4FeEDTA, only the Sodium salt. We found that the more the Ammonia content, the higher the rate of Bleaching, but only one Blix really worked. One group learned how to make NH4FeEDTA and patented it (Stephen and Surash at EK USP 3615508) and another learned how to make a true film Blix (Mowrey, Stephen and Wolfarth of EK). You may wish to look at Example #1 in the patent by Stephen and Surash. The blix outside the invention is essentially the powder kit we are talking about. The sodium salt based blix is about 3x slower with the test film. This is what you will find!
Good luck.
PE
I'm sure it works, but I suggest you look for the following:
1. Premature dye fade, especially in older negative films made before ~2002.
2. Mold or fungus growth on negatives.
3. High grain, reduced color saturation and high contrast compared to commercially processed negatives.
#3 is the biggest immediate problem, as that Blix will have trouble removing all of the Silver metal in all films. BTDT! I ran Silver analyses on films processed in Blixes like that. Even a few milligrams of Silver per square foot causes image degradation.
Back in the 60s, we could not get NH4FeEDTA, only the Sodium salt. We found that the more the Ammonia content, the higher the rate of Bleaching, but only one Blix really worked. One group learned how to make NH4FeEDTA and patented it (Stephen and Surash at EK USP 3615508) and another learned how to make a true film Blix (Mowrey, Stephen and Wolfarth of EK). You may wish to look at Example #1 in the patent by Stephen and Surash. The blix outside the invention is essentially the powder kit we are talking about. The sodium salt based blix is about 3x slower with the test film. This is what you will find!
Good luck.
PE