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Heater for Color Processing

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geyes30

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Hi,

I am interested in getting into color processing (both slide and negative). I have been developing my own BW for about 2 years now, so I am familiar with the developing process. However, I have not been able to find a suitable heater that can be used to heat up a water bath for the color chemicals. Does anyone have any good, relatively cheap suggestions? I have heard some aquarium heaters can be 'hacked' to heat past 36 degC. I am based in the US, so the Nova series of heaters will be prohibitively expensive to ship here. Thanks!
 
Don't need one. The past few days i've been doing E6 with a washtub with holes drilled in it and water from a sink. Even E6 has more room for error than people would leave you to believe. I developed 4 degrees under temp as a test, with no noticeable color shifting to my eye...
 
I've tempered my water bath for color work on both an electric griddle and an 18qt electric roasting pan. The ones with dials can maintain a low enough temp just fine.
 
An electric hot plate.

Before a Jobo came into my life I picked up a two burner version at WalMart. Used a couple old stock pots filled with water. Worked great and quite accurately.
 
if you have a LARGE enough tray and a table strong enough to hold a bunch of --a large water bath is the thing...very constant temperature and you can goose it up or down if the surrounding temperature is too cold. water holds a lot of heat and you can use all that water as rinse water---bathtub works in a pinch but leveling is a bit of a hassle----just add hot water to it when the temp goes down a half a degree...you'll get the hang of it--a heater is extra electric cords--"tripping hazards" and just get in the way--I like to keep the electricity away from the water---actually a MIXER is better to have than a heater if you don't mind electrical--a circulating pump--adding hot water on one end takes a LONG time to get to the other end--I find that constant swirling and adding water all over that large volume is necessary to distribute the temperature...of course now I haven't done e6 in a while...
 
I have a traditional 300W immersion aquarium heater, with the stops removed from the setting dial. I have it wound up to give 38C.

It hangs diagonally with a little suction cup bracket meant to hold it stuck to the inside of a smallish cooler/eskie.

I also have an aqaurium water pump that hangs on the top edge of the cooler to circulate the water in the water bath.

I have used 'duct seal' to keep condensation out of the electrics when I put the lid on this 'cooler', but plasticine from a kids play box would work just as well. Always power such an arrangement from a GFCI/RCD protected outlet.

This is for tempering chemistry and maintaning temperature while processing 35mm or 120/220 on reels in daylight type tanks. For 4x5 I resort to a sink line style of processing with film supported on hangers.

I find it brings chems stored in 1L amber glass bittles from 18C to 38C in under 1.5 hours. I load it up and turn it on after work, and then after the dinner dishes are washed and put away the chemistry is ready to go.
 
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