Who knows...but re: film chemicals, I use it for everything except hypo clear, Photo Flo, and rinse water. I don't use it for any of my paper chemicals, as the volumes are larger.
do i need to use distilled water for mixing developer and dilution? i'm thinking about xtol developer.
(By the way: while you don't want to drink distilled water, using a consistently pure spring sourced bottled water for making coffee (like "EartH2O" from Oregon) yields consistently excellent results.)
Craig (who is learning so _much_ from reading through the APUG forum, as I return to using film (Neopan-1600?) for astrophotography. Thanks, everyone!)
May I ask why not? I don't drink it but know someone who does.

May I ask why not? I don't drink it but know someone who does.
De-ionized or distilled water tastes flat due to the lack of mnerals and oxygen in it. There is some research which indicates that people who live in areas with soft water have a higher incidence of heart disease.
...I've been running HOT water through it for 1min so far, and to my tastebuds, doesn't seem to hurt it at all.
-Dan
Of course not, soft water just contains less dissolved minerals than hard water.Are you claiming that distilled water is the same as soft water?
No only demi-water.
Pure water they are making with Reversed Osmose, a UV lamp and a fine 10um carbon filter. Then it can be used for chemical analysis. For making it you need a Millipore MQ water system. Pretty expensive too.
I have very good results with the Brita filter system. BTW nice for drinking too which is not a good idea with MQ water.
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