ChristopherCoy
Subscriber
I seem to be having fixer issues. Two weeks ago or so, I mixed up a fresh batch of Kodak Rapid Fixer. Poured part A into water, then vigorously stirred and poured part B in according to directions, yadda yadda yadda.
The next day I developed 4 rolls of 35mm Tri-X that I had shot in New Orleans. I'd develop, stop bath, fix according to directions. The D76, and stop bath would be thrown out, but I'd keep the Fixer as I thought you could keep it until it was exhausted. After those four rolls, I used the fixer to make maybe 5 5x7's and 4 8x10's, again saving the fixer.
So day before yesterday I decided to go back into the darkroom. Our studio has been without heat while we wait on the landlord to repair it, and so it gets down to about 60 inside at night. I poured my fixer out of the black 1 gallon jug I keep it in, and I noticed a whole bunch of floating things. It was like flakes or granules. Is this fixer that dried on the inside then got washed off when I picked up the jug to pour a new batch? Or is is solidification due to the colder than normal temperatures?
As well, I noticed that when using this fixer, after a few prints (I'd say 5 or 6 5x7's again, and three or so 8x10's), when I would turn on the lights after to check the prints, they would turn gray or bluish. I made sure to leave them in the fixer for 5 minutes or more, and put them into the sink to wash.
So my questions are:
1. Does a gallon of fixer exhaust this quickly? I would think I could get more than a few rolls of film and 20 or so prints out of it.
2. Whats causing the floaties?
3. Whats the coldest temperatures that fixer can reliably work in? (Yes I could do a hot bath to bring the temperature up, but the sink in our studio isn't large enough to hold a 1 gallon jug, and I have no way to fill a bucket except with my two cup graduate. The fixer temp was about 62)
The next day I developed 4 rolls of 35mm Tri-X that I had shot in New Orleans. I'd develop, stop bath, fix according to directions. The D76, and stop bath would be thrown out, but I'd keep the Fixer as I thought you could keep it until it was exhausted. After those four rolls, I used the fixer to make maybe 5 5x7's and 4 8x10's, again saving the fixer.
So day before yesterday I decided to go back into the darkroom. Our studio has been without heat while we wait on the landlord to repair it, and so it gets down to about 60 inside at night. I poured my fixer out of the black 1 gallon jug I keep it in, and I noticed a whole bunch of floating things. It was like flakes or granules. Is this fixer that dried on the inside then got washed off when I picked up the jug to pour a new batch? Or is is solidification due to the colder than normal temperatures?
As well, I noticed that when using this fixer, after a few prints (I'd say 5 or 6 5x7's again, and three or so 8x10's), when I would turn on the lights after to check the prints, they would turn gray or bluish. I made sure to leave them in the fixer for 5 minutes or more, and put them into the sink to wash.
So my questions are:
1. Does a gallon of fixer exhaust this quickly? I would think I could get more than a few rolls of film and 20 or so prints out of it.
2. Whats causing the floaties?
3. Whats the coldest temperatures that fixer can reliably work in? (Yes I could do a hot bath to bring the temperature up, but the sink in our studio isn't large enough to hold a 1 gallon jug, and I have no way to fill a bucket except with my two cup graduate. The fixer temp was about 62)

