charky
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- Joined
- Jul 8, 2010
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I have read through this 2008 thread,
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
But it seems that there is a huge factor-of-2 difference in the number of rolls that can be processed which is not resolved in this thread.
amuderick says "I keep my Kodak E-6 Kit chemicals in their original bottles. I measure out the amount needed to mix 500ml of solution at a time and process 4 120 rolls. "
srs5694 says " Kodak's 5-liter E-6 kit costs about $50 from Adorama or B&H (but B&H won't ship it). That's enough to process 20 rolls of film (at 250ml per roll),"
Nigel says "I do not run the Kodak kit to exhaustion. I like to use fresh chemistry for consistency, so I mix what I need and discard after one use. This means that I can get 20 rolls of 35mm equivilent from the 5L kit."
amuderick then says "I use 125ml per roll (500ml solution for 4 rolls of 120 film) and have had no problems. The last round of slides after month seven had the same great colors as the first batch.
I think only running 20 rolls on the kit is a mistake and a waste. However, I also think that re-using the chemicals and adjusting for time is asking for trouble. The best bet is to use the minimum fluid volume you can in your tank. In my tank that corresponds nicely to the minimum amount of chemicals recommended in the Kodak publication (42 rolls per 5 liters of developer)."
So I wonder what is going on here: My tank needs 590 mL to cover 2 rolls of 120 which are spliced (or one 220 roll). I could probably use 500 mL of each Kodak solution and dilute to 590 safely (?), thus getting me 20 rolls of 120 processed from 5L.
I have trouble imagining a tank than can hold a 120 rolls in 125 mL. Do such high density tanks exist? What about 250 mL solution tanks than can hold a 220 roll (or 2 spliced 120s)?
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
But it seems that there is a huge factor-of-2 difference in the number of rolls that can be processed which is not resolved in this thread.
amuderick says "I keep my Kodak E-6 Kit chemicals in their original bottles. I measure out the amount needed to mix 500ml of solution at a time and process 4 120 rolls. "
srs5694 says " Kodak's 5-liter E-6 kit costs about $50 from Adorama or B&H (but B&H won't ship it). That's enough to process 20 rolls of film (at 250ml per roll),"
Nigel says "I do not run the Kodak kit to exhaustion. I like to use fresh chemistry for consistency, so I mix what I need and discard after one use. This means that I can get 20 rolls of 35mm equivilent from the 5L kit."
amuderick then says "I use 125ml per roll (500ml solution for 4 rolls of 120 film) and have had no problems. The last round of slides after month seven had the same great colors as the first batch.
I think only running 20 rolls on the kit is a mistake and a waste. However, I also think that re-using the chemicals and adjusting for time is asking for trouble. The best bet is to use the minimum fluid volume you can in your tank. In my tank that corresponds nicely to the minimum amount of chemicals recommended in the Kodak publication (42 rolls per 5 liters of developer)."
So I wonder what is going on here: My tank needs 590 mL to cover 2 rolls of 120 which are spliced (or one 220 roll). I could probably use 500 mL of each Kodak solution and dilute to 590 safely (?), thus getting me 20 rolls of 120 processed from 5L.
I have trouble imagining a tank than can hold a 120 rolls in 125 mL. Do such high density tanks exist? What about 250 mL solution tanks than can hold a 220 roll (or 2 spliced 120s)?