ParkerSmithPhoto
Member
Anyone making their own rapid fixer? I love Ilford Rapid Fix, just wondering if I can save any $ making my own. Thanks!
I don't think you'll save a lot (if any!) money ...
No.Is it just a 60% solution of ammonium thiosulphate?
Is it just a 60% solution of ammonium thiosulphate? I'm lucky enough to work in an environment where I have a kilo of the stuff in powder form....
Are there no other ingredients?
Here is a link to a thread I had bookmarked for one such fixer described by Gerald:
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
The more ions you add to a fixer, the more ionic strength effects will slow down fixation. While amounts up to 50 g/l of Ammonium Chloride will speed up a Sodium Thiosulfate fixer, amounts above 50 g/l will decrease that speedup, until you end up slower than with a plain hypo fixer.They contain approximately 50 g/l of the ammonium salt. Why isn't the amount higher as say a molar ratio of 1:1?
BTW there is little point in complaining, that Ammonium Thiosulfate 60% solution ships with 40% water, since the common form of Sodium Thiosulfate, which is the Pentahydrate, also contains plenty of crystal water, 36% water to be accurate.
I just checked whether and under which conditions B&H would ship 5l Ilford Rapid Fixer liquid concentrate to California. UPS ground would be by far the cheapest option, but they'd also ship through UPS next day air and through USPS Priority Mail. The restrictions you mentioned may apply to corrosive, flammable or otherwise hazardous liquids, but not to relatively mundane rapid fixer concentrate. Since it's also easy to get rapid fixer shipped with EU, that might not be a big issue.For the US I don't believe the USPS permits you to ship liquids except in small amounts. No restriction of sodium thiosulfate crystals except 70 lb limit per package. This forces shipment by other carriers that are more expensive. So liquid ammonium thiosulfate will be more expensive to ship. Don't know about the EU restrictions.
I just checked whether and under which conditions B&H would ship 5l Ilford Rapid Fixer liquid concentrate to California. UPS ground would be by far the cheapest option, but they'd also ship through UPS next day air and through USPS Priority Mail. The restrictions you mentioned may apply to corrosive, flammable or otherwise hazardous liquids, but not to relatively mundane rapid fixer concentrate. Since it's also easy to get rapid fixer shipped with EU, that might not be a big issue.
I went down this road once and realistically did not find a real savings , vs PIA of preparing. I am quite happy buying the Hypam or Rapid Fix in the 5 litre containers.Anyone making their own rapid fixer? I love Ilford Rapid Fix, just wondering if I can save any $ making my own. Thanks!
Well, following that MSDS and common knowledge about fixers, I'd say that it contains Ammonium Thiosulfate, Ammonium Sulfite, possibly some sequestering agent for water hardness and Boric Acid. The Boric Acid brings pH down to target pH, buffers it at that pH, and makes the fixer compatible with hardeners. No idea whether these rapid fixers contain anything less, but given that they are no match for Ron's Superfix 1, I would assume that the above listed compounds are pretty much it.What is commercial rapid fixer?Is it near 60% ammonium thiosulfate or does it ship with added water?
It appears to be 36-50 % thiosulfate so not much added water.
http://www.ilfordphoto.com/Webfiles/20092129200964.pdf
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |