ADOX, Foma, Ilford. Support these guys instead. They want your business.
I do, for black and white. But I also like C41 and RA4, a lot, and they can't help me with that.
ADOX, Foma, Ilford. Support these guys instead. They want your business.
+1
I have used Sprint chemistry in my school lab for 14 years. It's very consistent in quality and I am a huge fan of mixing from liquid instead of from powder. And they are a friendly, down to earth small company. One time I called to place an order and the owner answered the phone.
I’ve been using their full suite of chemicals (film and print) for some weeks now. Liking them quite a bit so far. My only concern (coming from HC110) is how long the STANDARD film developer will last once open. Bottle says “at least” three months, but I’ve distributed into smaller amber bottles hoping to get even more time — I sometimes only develop a handful of rolls per month and would hate to end of wasting any of it.
After discovering the Kodak Dektol I'd just mixed was brown, today I mixed up some D76 and it's purple! I finally found this on an old RFF post
"If you have Catalog #1058270 (Batch 2020/01/23 8438 & Batch 2019/10/09 8432), you may have noticed a discoloring of your product. Please know we’re aware of this and apologize for the inconvenience or confusion this may have caused for a product you’re well used to. Rest assured we want to get this taken care of for you. Please email us at ProPaperChem@KodakAlaris.com and our team will be back in touch to provide you with next steps on this specific product.*If you have the product in your care and have not yet opened it, we encourage you to reach out to us for next steps as well."
This is very frustrating, because that is indeed my batch. It should have been recalled. Both these developers were bought recently from two different photo suppliers.
I've been using the brown Dektol at home and even though it looks like weak root beer, it seems to work just fine.
I use the 1L "cubetainers", so I don't know how rate of oxidation compares to using the bottles. But from my experience you should have no problem going way beyond 3 months if you are minimizing air in the bottles.
Interestingly (and maybe this is normal?... the intricacies of photo chemistry aren't my specialty), the developer gets more active as it ages. I am working through a batch I received 18 months ago (pandemic scrambled everything, of course) and I am having to cut around 20% from chart development times.
It will work but the paper characteristics will be a bit different. But, who knows, that change may make your prints better.
As noted many times the brown color is oxidized (no longer working) metol. The only active developing agent is then hyroquinone and the paper and film contrast should increase as will the required developing time. Also the s. sulfite will change to s. sulfate and so film grain will increase with less 'solvent' action.
I'm very happy I have changed to using raw chemicals to make my own developer, fixer et al. and don't have to deal with Alaris (or whoever it is now). I do have quite a bit of 'vintage' Microdol-X and Technidol left, if I run out of those I will have to get into experimentation mode (and no, it isn't going to involve Rodinal).
Has anyone “proven” the bad developer is truly bad? I thought that Kodak asserted the color was photographically insignificant. I would believe it when it comes to purple. But brown would take some getting used to.
And if it’s really “oxidized” Metol that’s one thing. But if it’s merely a contaminant that doesn’t affect processing I could overlook it.
Unless it’s a health hazard contaminant that could lead to “Metol poisoning” that would stop me.
I'm one of those internet idiots who dumps his used film developer into his paper developer
There's nothing wrong with that because it will have next to no impact, other than to slightly boost the alkalinity of your paper developer. The amounts of active ingredients in film developer are lower than in paper developer - and, already used, their potency has been sapped. The only thing that's potentially problematic is repeatability. A lot of people take notes on how to get a particular finished print, so having their fresh tray developer the same every time is a key to that.
I'd be more worried about stray gelatin and stuff like anti-halation dyes.
Of course if you are a member of the church of Rodinol, maybe the partially spent developer will add to the spirituality of your prints.
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