Michael Mutmansky
Member
Tsuyoshi,
No need for a pH meter. They can be fraught with problems, and the probes will need replacement from time to time.
I purchased pH strips from Edmund Scientific (100 strips for $1.00). They are certainly accurate for what is required here; ensuring that the developer is acidic, and checking the spectrum of clearing baths, etc.
Kerik says that he keeps his developer around pH 6. I like to drop mine down to about pH 5.5 because it will tend to drift upwards as papers are put into the developer (and the buffers leach out). So, starting at 5.5 will give a bit more time before the developer needs a bit more acid. It's one fewer thing to monitor closely. Oxalic acid is a clearing bath solution, so all that will happen is the print may clear a bit more in the developer.
There's no need to make sure about the absolute pH of the developer, just make sure it is decidedly on the acidic side.
As for EDTA, the tetra- version is basic, and does make a good final clearing bath for that reason. However, the di- version is acidic (around pH 4, if I remeber correctly), so it could safely be used in clearing baths without concern of ferrous conversion.
---Michael
No need for a pH meter. They can be fraught with problems, and the probes will need replacement from time to time.
I purchased pH strips from Edmund Scientific (100 strips for $1.00). They are certainly accurate for what is required here; ensuring that the developer is acidic, and checking the spectrum of clearing baths, etc.
Kerik says that he keeps his developer around pH 6. I like to drop mine down to about pH 5.5 because it will tend to drift upwards as papers are put into the developer (and the buffers leach out). So, starting at 5.5 will give a bit more time before the developer needs a bit more acid. It's one fewer thing to monitor closely. Oxalic acid is a clearing bath solution, so all that will happen is the print may clear a bit more in the developer.
There's no need to make sure about the absolute pH of the developer, just make sure it is decidedly on the acidic side.
As for EDTA, the tetra- version is basic, and does make a good final clearing bath for that reason. However, the di- version is acidic (around pH 4, if I remeber correctly), so it could safely be used in clearing baths without concern of ferrous conversion.
---Michael