gainer
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- Joined
- Sep 20, 2002
- Messages
- 3,699
It may be that the washing sequence is the problem. You don't give enough detail. What do you mean by "rinse"? I have, for Q&D work, washed test negs in the tank with 3 changes of tap water, vigorously agitating between changes, wiped them with a paper towel between fingers, and dried them with a hair dryer on low heat. No drying marks or haze and no scratches. My tap water is so hard I don't use it to make carbonate developers because of tha suspended calcium carbonate.
Don't think about what your additives are taking away, but what the wash is not taking away. Whatever is in the emulsion when drying begins ia a sampling of a mixture of all the previous solutions it has had in it. 5 changes of water, agitating for 1 minute between changes, is far better than 5 minutes in the same wash, agitation or not. The best washing can do is to make the contents of the emulsion the same as the contents of the wash water.
Try washing the negatives with 5 changes of water, agitating for 1 minute in each change. If you are addicted to Photo Flo, do one more minute with that solution. Otherwise, try the paper towel squeege with very little pressure. Now, if the drying marks persist, something else is wrong, IMHO.
Don't think about what your additives are taking away, but what the wash is not taking away. Whatever is in the emulsion when drying begins ia a sampling of a mixture of all the previous solutions it has had in it. 5 changes of water, agitating for 1 minute between changes, is far better than 5 minutes in the same wash, agitation or not. The best washing can do is to make the contents of the emulsion the same as the contents of the wash water.
Try washing the negatives with 5 changes of water, agitating for 1 minute in each change. If you are addicted to Photo Flo, do one more minute with that solution. Otherwise, try the paper towel squeege with very little pressure. Now, if the drying marks persist, something else is wrong, IMHO.