You easily end up with little paper fibres in the wrong places, if you use the fixer for both purposes. Plus the film fixer is often less diluted too. To check the stuff is still ok (regardless of the film-count) use a scrap of film to check the clearing time when it's fresh, then double that time in use. Keep checking during the life of the fixer and then doubling the time.
I thought that there is a difference between film and paper fix?
I am under the assumption that for film it is 32oz of stock mixed
with enough water to make a gallon and for paper it is 16oz plus
water to make a gallon. Have i been doing it wrong?
I use kodak rapid fix.
Dan, how would I test for the right
time to fix the film negs with the paper fix dilution? Arthur
...An extreme example is the Very dilute one-shot method by which I use fixer. The fixer is good for only one roll.
A leader test may show it good for another roll
though the amount of good chemistry left
will not clear it.
Several years ago I ran a series of tests to determine
the minimums of chemistry needed. With my usual
500ml tank I found a dilution of 1:24 more than
adequate for any of my needs. Dan
.
Dan, I'm a big fan of one-shot chemistry and very interested
in these test results. Is there more detail available? Do you
have a test report by any chance?
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