It would help to know what kind of chemistry this is.
In general I'd expect a working stock reversal bath based on tin chloride to be of suspect usability if it turns cloudy. The amber color is supposedly in part due to carry-over of the first developer, which may result in stability problems with the reversal bath. Do you use an adequate wash between first development and the subsequent reversal step?
Pink and cloudy is absolutely fine, but don't use it to exhaustion.
This is more noticeable processing lots of Ektachrome, and especially Ektachrome motion picture film.
John S
It would help to know what kind of chemistry this is.
In general I'd expect a working stock reversal bath based on tin chloride to be of suspect usability if it turns cloudy. The amber color is supposedly in part due to carry-over of the first developer, which may result in stability problems with the reversal bath. Do you use an adequate wash between first development and the subsequent reversal step?
Turning amber would mean something like a huge carryover of developer. which would mean in practice that 1st wash was completely omitted.
Ektachrome movie stock will dye everything pink, including reversal. But I have never seen this king of color with any films..
I still doubt the carryover from just 6 sheets of 4x5 would be enough to change any of the properties of the reversal bath. Dyes in the film are much more likely. In that case, they should have no effect on the process.Not necessarily; even a 2 minute water wash without any change of water can still induce a carryover of very dilute developer that will over time turn the following bath yellow - and raise its pH. Like you, this makes me worried about the stannous chloride that's in solution and that's notoriously unreliable to keep in solution.
Most modern color negative films release magenta dyes during processing and final wash. This includes modern Portra, Ektar, Vision3 and also (genuine Fuji) Superia. One of the exceptions is Harman Phoenix, and I think (IIRC) Orwo NC/Shanghai 400 also releases golden/straw colored dyes instead of magenta ones. I don't know about E6.
I have seen reversal recipes, which use traces of p-Aminophenol as oxygen scavengers. If those turn brown, then it's not a good sign for that reversal bath.
I've always wondered what the role of aminophenol is in the reversal bath. As far as I remember, it was in very small amounts - is it enough as a competitor?
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