Maine-iac
Member
This is an update of a trial I began in January, when I mixed up some E-72 (Phenidone, Ascorbic Acid version of D-72) in concentrated form (tripled all ingredients but minus the alkali). See my article in the Chem Recipes section for the details and formula.
I did a printing session two weeks ago, mixing up a liter of working strength from the concentrate in a 1:9 dilution (the concentrate was now more than three months old in a partially full bottle), and it has not discolored nor lost potency. After running 10 8X10's and 6 11X14's through the soup, I then saved the working solution for ten days until my next printing session. This time, without replenishment, I ran 4 8X10's and 12 11X14's through the soup, again with no loss of potency. The only thing was that for the last three prints of the session, I lengthened my development time to 1:45 from the usual 1:15 to get full development. So at the end of the session I dumped the remainder.
I'm still very pleased with the results, particularly the richness of the blacks and the long tonal scale. I'm satisfied that the concentrate (minus the alkali) will keep for a very long time, and the ease of mixing it 1:9 with water and throwing two tablespoons of sodium carbonate into the tray of diluted developer is about as cheap and easy as it gets.
Larry
I did a printing session two weeks ago, mixing up a liter of working strength from the concentrate in a 1:9 dilution (the concentrate was now more than three months old in a partially full bottle), and it has not discolored nor lost potency. After running 10 8X10's and 6 11X14's through the soup, I then saved the working solution for ten days until my next printing session. This time, without replenishment, I ran 4 8X10's and 12 11X14's through the soup, again with no loss of potency. The only thing was that for the last three prints of the session, I lengthened my development time to 1:45 from the usual 1:15 to get full development. So at the end of the session I dumped the remainder.
I'm still very pleased with the results, particularly the richness of the blacks and the long tonal scale. I'm satisfied that the concentrate (minus the alkali) will keep for a very long time, and the ease of mixing it 1:9 with water and throwing two tablespoons of sodium carbonate into the tray of diluted developer is about as cheap and easy as it gets.
Larry