fotch
Member
Maybe its the water, are you using or have you tried distilled water?
I've had to deal with the problems of foam in my chemical career for 20 years. The amount of foam that I'm getting when developing Delta 3200 is massive. When the tank lid comes off the foam gushes out and overflows.
A thought. I have used replenished developers for about eight years now. They foam considerably more than stock or diluted stock. The latest developer I'm using, Harvey's 777 Panthermic, is a bit of an exotic creature, and it discolors my stop bath to the point that the indicator stops working. I'm not sure what's in that soup, honestly, but I've started using a water rinse before my stop bath to prevent this unwanted effect.
What I've noticed is that the excess foaming that takes place in stop bath and fixer has drastically decreased. You might try that also, and see what happens. It might help your stop and fixer steps.
I wonder if the water quality in different regions of the world reacts with films in different ways. I'm sure that there are traces of contaminants in water everywhere, pH is different, mineral content, and so on. Not sure what else to think. Good luck in finding an answer.
I'm reluctant to change my process.
My mind has wandered to a reaction of an Ilford film element with things in the water. Youre in Shanghai.
Not conductive to finding a solution, right?![]()
I can't help but think that foam in developers and fixers is a bad thing, yet I can't see any sign of problems. The amount of foam is just amazing. I have the lid off my tank after the final set of inversions and for the last minute can watch my developer very slowly drain down the funnel, taking the whole minute as the foam breaks so slowly. I get heavy foam regardless of whether or not I use DD-X or HC-110.
Is this foam well known to everyone here? I don't think I've seen much talk about it. I can't believe that I'm the only one with this issue. As I said, most would think that I invert much too softly but that is still enough to generate heavy heavy foam.
Thanks,
Hi Ratty, I know from own experiance that it can be very annoying if you have to explain your problem again and again. On the other side I'm sure you can acknowledge as a chemist that your problem is extremely strange for many of us. Beer-type foam and only with 2 different Ilford films, that must sound very strange in the ear of someone like me who never experianced any foaming at all exept for very few bubbles when I heavily agitate the real in the open tank to see what happens. I developed hundreds of films in the same tank and only rinse very quickly with cold tap water for cleaning and never had the slightest foam problem, including some Delta 3200. So, to be honest, I have no clue at all what is happening to you. Still I can't imagine that the films are to blame.1. ALL my film should foam if the water were a source of foam. This is certainly not true. As stated many times, None of these films foam when I process them: Acros, Neopan 400, TMAX 400, Tri-X, and HP5. Delta 3200 and 400 foam.
Just to add another (anecdotal) data point, I developed a 35mm roll of delta 3200 in id-11. All the chemicals were mixed with tap water. I have never seen, in my limited experience, a clearer development. No foam at all, clear chemicals without any "colour discharge" in the water (which I've seen with other ilford or Fuji films, and which goes away with washing). I use ilford recommended washing technique. The end results is a clear base, seemingly well developed negative.
I hope that you'll be able to figure out a reason for what you are observing and keep us informed.
I'm wondering how to you develop the film in the tank: do you shake the tank like a cocktail, just rotate the spindle or do you do the Ilford inversions? Do you act "fast and furious" or gently?
I'm wondering how to you develop the film in the tank: do you shake the tank like a cocktail, just rotate the spindle or do you do the Ilford inversions? Do you act "fast and furious" or gently?
Pretty much the same here, Sirius. Except it is 4 inversions for 10 sec every minute. That's how I learned.
Dear Rattymouse,
I await foam feedback
Simon.
What was the culprit into the end? Do you know, or is it just a case of eliminating the film as the cause?
I wonder how many will return and read the post that declares it isn't the film, and continue to propagate the false info on line.
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