Quote (Wish I knew how to do that properly)
"In the long term attaching anything to a print will reduce its life unless its kept in an archival environment in which case attaching or not attaching anything is irrelevant. All drymount will achieve is to prolong life in a far from ideal environment such as a testing chamber."
According to what you say, no photograph not stored in a perfectly controlled environment throught its entire life, and few if any photographs are, can be considered archival. We are talking about the real world here, not some utopia of storage conditions. There are pre-acidic gasses everywhere. Eventually, they deteriorate photographs. Based on how many photographs look that were made over 100 years ago, before "Archival Processing," pre-acidic gasses can take a long time to affect the print. But they will do so if not properly protected. Dry mounting adds an additional layer of protection. Period. There can be no dispute abut that.
Quote: "If a print is properly framed with sealed front of frame, i.e. glass to frame, and proper backing board, barrier board and mount board, then any contaminents have to pass through or by those to get at the print and they can be changed easily. So dry mount is not necessary."
Pre-acidic gasses will get through all backing boards, whether they are changed regularly or not, except for ArtCare board, which has its micro-chamber technology. Other 100% all-rag museum board does not provide protection from these gasses. I guess you could put the print between two pieces of glass. That would do it without dry mounting, but the weight and storage requirements would make that not very practical. Even hinging to ArtCare board will not protect the print, as the pre-acidic gasses can get between the board and the print, as the tests showed.
Quote: On the other hand if the print is subjected to all these bad environmental conditions, then its life will be vastly reduced anyway regardless of drymounting."
According to you, all environments except for an "archival environment" will deteriorate photographs. That may be so, but dry mounting will certainly prolong the life of a photograph. I believe the definition of "archival" for photographs is "x" years, not "forever." (I do not know the figure offhand). I guarantee my prints for 1,000 years. With a guarantee. There is a catch, however. The guarantee is non-transferable.
Quote" So once again, using archival materials does not make your print archival. They can only be claimed to be non detrimental over the short term. It is controlling environmental conditions which will preserve your print for the long term. i.e. hundreds of years instead of 50-70 years.
A properly processed silver photograph, dry mounted onto ArtCare board should easily last hundreds of years when stored in normal conditions--not an "archival" environment, but not in a heavily polluted one either.
I suggest you read my article. It contains an interview with the inventor of ArtCare board. He supplies board to the National Archives and the Library of Congress. And not all of their holdings are stored in "archival environments." There must be something to it.