RattyMouse
Member
Vinegar?
Vinegar=acetic acid. I use dilutions of vinegar as my stop bath.
Vinegar?
Vinegar=acetic acid.
... Something similar happens when you drink a beverage that contains carbonic acid, for example beer. The hydrochloric acid in the stomach decomposes the carbonic acid and also releases some CO2. You burp.
I think an OP request to the moderators for a thread title change would be in order too.Dear RattyMouse,
Thanks for posting your results...
Vinegar=acetic acid. I use dilutions of vinegar as my stop bath.
Thread title updated.
I regularly develop FP4 Plus, HP5 Plus, Foma 100 and Foma 400, switching between Rodinal and Adox FX-39 depending on my target print size. I use only distilled water to dilute the developers, for a water only stop bath, to dilute the generic rapid fixer, and for the three changes of water for the Ilford method wash, and no wetting agent final rinse. I use stainless Kindermann tanks with plastic lids. None of them have ever been in contact with any wetting agent. I have never seen any foam with any combination of film and developer.
I have never had any foaming with any film, when developing.
I have seen foaming where the agitation was too vigorous and/or not enough chemical in the tank.
I see you mentioned homemade D76. Have you tried it in Kodak D76 or Ilford ID11 and got the same results?
I only use Ilford films these days, and I don't have this problem. So I really don't believe it's the film.Sorry to resurrect an old thread but the exact same thing as RattyMouse described happens to me, with Ilford HP5 this time, both 35mm and 120 format: A LOT of foam at the development stage. The other film I use is Fomapan 100 (35mm and 120) and it NEVER happens. I switched from Tri-X to HP5 a couple a years ago and since, this is hell. I use a Paterson 2 reel tank but I cannot put 2 35mm films at the same time as the foam clearly disturb the developer flow when flipping the tank.
Whatever the film (HP5 or Foma100), I always use the same tank, the same reels, the same process (home made D-76 developer, no stop bath, Ilford Rapid Fixer, Photo-Flo, 20 minutes washing), so the only variable is the film.
Am I the only one to notice that? Is it caused by an ingredient specific to Ilford films?
I can't help but notice that Ilford's films, at least Delta 3200 and Delta 400 make a LOT of foam, starting with the developer and carrying forward all the way into my fixer solution. I am not a heavy agitator when doing my inversions, but when developing these two films, by the end of the developing period, there is an INTENSE amount of foam in the solution. Upon popping open my Paterson tank, foam overflows out the top and down the side, like a good beer. Huge amounts of foam. I dump the developer and add stop bath and once that's done, it comes out again with heavy foam. Finally, after processing several rolls, my fixer now is tremendously foamy. Ilford films use a totally different set of surfactants compared to Fujifilm and Kodak.
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,
Foaming comes from too much agitation.
Foaming comes from too much agitation.
Harman provides its film surfaces (of the Ilford and Kentmere brands except for PanF) with an extra lubricant and wetting agent coating.
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