Anon Ymous
Member
Hello
Five days ago I mixed 500ml of what is rumored to be very close to Ilford's Perceptol. IIRC, it's Edgar Hyman's formula, containing 100g Sodium Sulfite, 30g Sodium Chloride and 5g Metol in 1l of water. The salt used was sea salt, without any additives and I used deionised water (most definitely not steam distilled). There were some particles in the solution after mixing all the ingredients, but a coffee filter took care of that and got a clear solution. I tried it the same day with a roll of APX100 and got some very nice results.
I kept this developer and the next day I noticed that it had gone murky. There seemed to be very fine particles suspended in the developer, which had started to settle a bit, the top 1cm of the developer was almost clear. Now it has almost everything has settled and there's this precipitate at the bottom of the bottle:
So, does anyone have any clue about what might have caused it? Could the salt used be the culprit? Since it's not distilled water, would a water softener (sodium tripolyphosphate) eliminate it? In case I get some chemically pure salt, can I substitute Sodium Chloride with Potassium Chloride, provided that I make a mol for mol substitution (use 27,5% more)?
Five days ago I mixed 500ml of what is rumored to be very close to Ilford's Perceptol. IIRC, it's Edgar Hyman's formula, containing 100g Sodium Sulfite, 30g Sodium Chloride and 5g Metol in 1l of water. The salt used was sea salt, without any additives and I used deionised water (most definitely not steam distilled). There were some particles in the solution after mixing all the ingredients, but a coffee filter took care of that and got a clear solution. I tried it the same day with a roll of APX100 and got some very nice results.
I kept this developer and the next day I noticed that it had gone murky. There seemed to be very fine particles suspended in the developer, which had started to settle a bit, the top 1cm of the developer was almost clear. Now it has almost everything has settled and there's this precipitate at the bottom of the bottle:
So, does anyone have any clue about what might have caused it? Could the salt used be the culprit? Since it's not distilled water, would a water softener (sodium tripolyphosphate) eliminate it? In case I get some chemically pure salt, can I substitute Sodium Chloride with Potassium Chloride, provided that I make a mol for mol substitution (use 27,5% more)?