The Kodak publication "KODAK FLEXICOLOR CHEMICALS", under the heading "STORING CHEMICAL CONCENTRATES AND SOLUTIONS" has this to say:
"Once you open the original container, the chemicals are exposed to oxygen that will react with the chemicals and gradually cause them to deteriorate. This is especially true of developers. Oxidation occurs to some extent even if you immediately reseal the container. To reduce the effects of oxidation, store solutions in amounts that you can use at one time. For example, if you open a 10-gallon-size container, mix the entire amount, and then store the solution in closed one-gallon containers. Each time you need more chemicals, open a bottle and use the entire amount. The remaining mix stored in separate containers is not exposed to air".
Thus, they advocate using my method.
God bless you <3
Yeah that makes sense.
Okay so I have one other question and a comment,
I received my Developer Starter (S) and all the replenisher parts (A,B,B) in containers that had no formal seals under their lids. Is that normal?
But the Bleach and Fix were both formally sealed with some kind of adhesive seal under the lid.
Another thing is I read Bleach likes Air, so is it safe to say that I can keep my RA Bleach in it's original container and use as needed (It requires no mixing at all)
I've read RPC's posts on these and related issues for 14 years now.
He (I think RPC is a he) is experienced. His advice is good.
Thank you for the confirmation! I feel annoying for being so cynical but this is good to hear that he's been in the field for at minimum 14 years
Also that quote is really good, and really applies to life very well. and to everything.. like in this book my frined gave me called "Trip Psychedelics Alienation, and Change" By Tao Lin he says something about truth being practically non existant and that something can usually only be "True enough" which honestly remidns me of that quote you posted and is something I need to learn to live by (I have a habbit of wanting something explained 5 different ways before I am confident I understand what they are saying)
The first time I mixed Kodak's RA-4 Bleach/Fix, I took the approach of incrementally mixing the concentrate a liter at a time. After a few months, the "fixer" concentrate started to settle into a sediment at the bottom of its container and I had to buy fresh.
When I got my second batch, I just went ahead and mixed the whole lot and stored it into a series of completely-full bottles like I've been doing with the developer. I'm not entirely sure if this will make it last longer, but my fingers are crossed. (My shooting has taken a nosedive in 2020, after doing a lot of "gearing up" in 2019, so when I do finally regain momentum I wouldn't be surprised if I have to replace a lot of things.)
I wonder what would happen if you put the cconcentrate in a bottle that was sized to fit all of it almost exactly, vs if you mixed all the fixer and also stored it to fit a bottle exactly.. which would last longer. But based off what I'm reading here it seems like it is best to always mix it all. I think I will still conduct an experiment soon. Get one bottle of the same fix and fill it max in a 1L bottle as a concentrate and also in another bottle as a working solution and store them together and return in some time and see who held up better