But despite this, the unexposed parts between the frames and the perforation itself appear to be slightly affected or not re-exposed at all... Maybe the water you diluted it in was contaminated?
But wouldn't that also mean that the test I did with the film ledger also would fail? Which, as fas as I know, it didn't?
But despite this, the unexposed parts between the frames and the perforation itself appear to be slightly affected or not re-exposed at all...
yes, but maybe it did fail on the original film and succeeded in the second test.
as said before, I'd toss all solutions, mix new ones, and use re-exposure rather than fogging agents.
I do not understand how the exact same bleach can fail first, then work.
I have used Iron Out many times without any problems.
The idea posted by @Raghu Kuvempunagar about chloride contamination would also make sense. If you still have that batch of bleach you could test for that on a section of film that was fully exposed and developed.
I did test a developed film ledger and the film cleared.
Did you try to redevelop it?
I did indeed use thiocyanate with it.
The effect you see is a re-revesal caused by permanganate bleach.
Developers have nothing to do with it.
Then it's the same. A bleach problem. The developers don't have nothing to do with it.
Adox MCC doesn't have anything that could interfere with the bleach action.
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