or even a plain sodium thiosulfate solution (240g per liter)
I bought 25kg/55lbs bag oh the stuff for cheap, and am using 100g of it + 10g Na2S2O5 per 500ml. From a recipe I got somewhere.... That bag will last for years.
2-3min fixing time with 3 inversions every 30 seconds. Time based on leader clear time + a minute. Fixing clearly has an effect on the end result, so I don't skip it, I want my film processed properly for reasons stated above.
Minimizing the fixer exposure also reflects in minimizing the potential emlsion lift off, that would be my main concern.
The potential of emulsion leaving the base certainly is a concern with reversal. But here's my thinking (to my current knowledge):
- Nobody is reporting that developer lifts the emulsion - so we can rule it out.
- I haven't seen reports of fixer lifting emulsion - can rule it out.
- Nobody is reporting that plain clear lifts the emulsion - out it goes as a potential suspect...
-- What's unique to reversal and is often reported to soften and lift emulsion when overdone? Bleach stage, of course!
Soooo - how can I limit the bleach activity to not overdo it?
Chemical activity depends on concentration, agitation, temperature, pressure and exposure time.
Considering that pressure, agitation and temperature are set, I can only 1) reduce bleach concentration or 2) reduce bleach time.
I like some extra cash and like to avoid putting avoidable quantities of chemicals down my drain (or storage for disposal), I chose to reduce bleach concentration.
For simplicity I keep recipe exactly the same, but when bleach stage comes, I just put 1 part Water to my 1 part A and 1 part B, making my bleach 1/3 dilute.
I keep bleach time the same as in recipe - again, for simplicity and not to adjust two reversal parameters.
Result of me playing around with concentration:
- Emulsion damage went away as a regular occurrence in BW reversal with pretty much any film;
- I have extra bleach for the same money.
- I reduced the pollution to my immediate environment due to my hobby.
- I learned how
underbleaching looks like and already knew what
overbleaching looks like...
If emulsion damage occurs with a particular film, I note it and bleach it for a minute less the next time around.
If a particular film gets underbleached (hasn't really happened yet), I'd bleach it for a minute longer the next time around...
//I also tend to develop for box EI (by eye and my taste). Therefore I can and do engage in traditional pushing or pulling, but with reversal.
//Results as expected: increased contrast with pushing, reduced with pulling and somewhere in-between with normal processing
//Therefore I don't suffer from "Shoot film "X" at EI "Y" to be compatbile with our reversal kit/service" - it's just film processing, not alchemy.