"Is there any reason not to mix it?"
Depends on the facility and the further processing. In Europe each group of photochemical waste has its own waste-code and is to be delivered apart.
Have another chat with that facility and inquire on what they prefer.
why dont you find out from your local authorities what you can and can not do ..
you can get your rinse and spent fixer below 5 parts/ million ..
it doesnt cost as much as. waste hauler would charge...
and you wont be polluting your ground water or fouling your septic or your towns wastewater plant
Here's a typical calculation: A home darkroom processes, say, 2000 sheets of 8x10 black and white photographic paper a year. If half the silver goes down the drain that's 3 ounces. If, instead of disposal, much of that is recovered and sold the net return after refining costs could be up to $30 per annum on today's silver market. A lot of people would say its not worth the trouble. Opinions differ.
If you choose check with local authorities, ask their permission for what you intend to do, and they say no, I guess you have to comply.
In more detail here's a broad calculation for a home darkroom using 2000 sheets of 8x10 gelatin-silver photographic paper per year:
Silver content of photographic paper is notionally 1 milligram per square inch so 2000 sheets or 160,000 square inches of paper carry 160 grammes of silver.
160 grammes is about 6 ounces. If half the silver stays in the paper to make the pictures the other half goes out in the fixer. That's about 3 ounces.
World silver prices vary but at $20 an ounce the discarded silver is potentially worth $60.
Allowing for the expenses in recovering the silver, shipping the concentrate, and refining it back to metal, the home darkroom operator could potentially score every year a $30 ingot about the size of a large coin. Turning this ingot into cash could fund the purchase of maybe 30 sheets of 8x10 photographic paper.
Worth it? YMMV.
Maris -- What are your recommendations for disposal of depleted selenium toner working solution.
Thanks, Dave
I never dispose of selenium toner. I replenish it, filter it and reuse it -- indefinitely. I have two gallon jugs of selenium toner of different strengths that have been going for about 10 years (maybe longer). No problems with toning activity or print longevity. I routinely do residual hypo and residual silver tests on my prints and they all pass with flying colors....
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