Photo Engineer
Subscriber
Rudi, if you look at the left column of chemistry in the reference you give it is for C41, but the right column is for RA4 or what is often called Ektacolor.
PE
PE
Separate bleach and fix need only one concentrate per bath, whereas BLIX usually needs two concentrates. The image on that Unique Photo site looks very much like the set of concentrates to make BLIX (one bottle containing a deep red liquid, the other bottle looks mostly colorless), whereas the same page states "bleach" all over the place.
Am I making significant compromises in archival qualities of a film by converting a 3-bath kit to separate bleach and fix instead of sending the film to a lab?
The C41RA fixer with thiocyanate seems to be around ph=7.1. I wonder if it is designed to depend on retained bleach along with the short fixing time, if that is too high a pH normally? Now I wonder if it would be bad to add a wash step after the bleachIandvaag, the pH is critical, all else being correct (CD, bleach, fix, wash etc...). That is why TF-4 is not suitable. It is alkaline. It would probably do something bad to the dyes. As long as the pH is between 5 and 6.5, as a good working range, things should be OK. Below or above that and you have problems.
PE
What method listed by Kodak is closest to processing in a small developing tank in tempered water bath: sink-line processing or rotary tube processing?
You should use Sodium Sulfite (=Na2SO3), not Sodium Sulfate (=Na2SO4).I have the Tetenal Colortec C-41, potassium bromide, indicator stop bath (with acetic acid), sodium sulfate, and TF-5 fixer on the way. These are the correct ingredients right?
Yes, that should work.I am mixing the BX part one with potassium bromide to get a pH of 5.5 for the bleach. If I need to adjust can I use the stop bath with the acetic acid to bring it down?
Again, you want Sodium Sulfite (=Na2SO3), not Sodium Sulfate (=Na2SO4). pH should be low for proper stopping action, but not too low, since too low pH will liberate nasty Sulfur Dioxide from Sodium Sulfite. Ideally you'd start with a solution of about 10 g/l Sodium Sulfite, to which you slowly, and with good stirring add indicator stop bath. The resulting mixture should be purple at first, and you should stop adding stop bath just when it turns yellow. If you are unsure, test this with a few very small batches first, then upscale your final procedure.I can use the stop bath and sodium sulfate to make a clearing bath correct? What pH am I looking for?
Bleach and fixer times should be extended as you reuse your bleach and fixer, but not nearly by as much as you have to with Tetenal's BLIX. Here are bleach and fixer times I would recommend, assuming you start with 500ml for each liquid and process rolls of 135 or 120 film:I have been doing C41 for a while and I noticed that every kit gives you adjusted times for the more rolls that are processed with the chemicals. Since the bleach and fix are separate in this process do they exhaust as quickly? Do I need to adjust bleaching times as often? Are there hints I can be keying on in development to see bleach exhaustion?
PE:There is a complete chart on times vs usage on the EK web site under C41 processing
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