- Joined
- Jun 24, 2009
- Messages
- 237
- Format
- 35mm
In the past I have been a staunch advocate of the long shelf life of HC-110 and still am. As others have said, I think the shelf life of HC-110 is such that it will outlive the shelf. However, yesterday I went into a storage room where I have been keeping my photo-chemicals and was moving a few bottles around to make room for something else. I picked up a fairly old 16 oz. Kodak bottle of HC-110 and noticed that right around the bottom rim of the bottle there was kind of a pinch. I picked up the bottle to see what was causing it and upon feeling it I could detect a small drop of HC-110 concentrate. In short, I had a leak.
I immediately decanted the remaining concentrate into an amber glass container and washed out the Kodak bottle to see what had caused the leak. The leak was on the bottom rim where a fold pinch had formed. It looks like the fold was caused by a pressure differential caused by a temperature shift in my storage room. Kodak has constructed these containers in such a way that the other portions of the bottle are very rigid, making the bottom rim the weak spot. The fold crack appeared 90 degrees away from what appears like a forming seam where two halves of a mold come together. I noticed that the opposite side of the rim was a similarly constructed and is certainly the thinest plastic in the entire container. HC-110 is not my usual developer, so this bottle is quite old. The date code is 9927 which would be the 27th week of 1999.
So, if I was you and you have a bottle of HC-110 setting around, I would take a close look at it and see if anything looks amiss. I'm thinking about sending my empty bottle to Kodak, but the Hazmat considerations have me debating whether that is a good thing to do. Perhaps I'll email them and ask if they would like to take a look at it. I'm sure they will just tell me that I shouldn't keep it that long.
Denis K
I immediately decanted the remaining concentrate into an amber glass container and washed out the Kodak bottle to see what had caused the leak. The leak was on the bottom rim where a fold pinch had formed. It looks like the fold was caused by a pressure differential caused by a temperature shift in my storage room. Kodak has constructed these containers in such a way that the other portions of the bottle are very rigid, making the bottom rim the weak spot. The fold crack appeared 90 degrees away from what appears like a forming seam where two halves of a mold come together. I noticed that the opposite side of the rim was a similarly constructed and is certainly the thinest plastic in the entire container. HC-110 is not my usual developer, so this bottle is quite old. The date code is 9927 which would be the 27th week of 1999.
So, if I was you and you have a bottle of HC-110 setting around, I would take a close look at it and see if anything looks amiss. I'm thinking about sending my empty bottle to Kodak, but the Hazmat considerations have me debating whether that is a good thing to do. Perhaps I'll email them and ask if they would like to take a look at it. I'm sure they will just tell me that I shouldn't keep it that long.
Denis K
