Background: in the winter, we sleep with the temperature set at 56 deg. When my wife wakes up, she wants it 68, quickly. So, she turns the dial to 78 or so, and then forgets about it. The temperature soars. I get up much later and turn the dial to 68. I tell her: just set it for 68, since setting it higher won't get it to 68 more quickly and we're wasting money. We've been having that conversation for almost 42 years now....
When trying to warm up developer quickest, does it matter if the surrounding water is much hotter than the targeted temperature or just the temperature that I want the developer to get at? Let's say I'm using a sous vide in a plastic tub and immerse my developer and blix, aiming at 102 deg. For the purposes of getting the chemicals to the right temperature the quickest, does it matter whether I set my sous vide for 102 or set it a lot hotter and therefore make the water much hotter than 102?
(I realize blix doesn't need to get to 102; I also don't care what the temperature of the water is after I lift out the developer & blix: I don't put the Patterson tank in it between agitations.)
I really struggled with high school chemistry class and now I know why.....
Thanks!
When trying to warm up developer quickest, does it matter if the surrounding water is much hotter than the targeted temperature or just the temperature that I want the developer to get at? Let's say I'm using a sous vide in a plastic tub and immerse my developer and blix, aiming at 102 deg. For the purposes of getting the chemicals to the right temperature the quickest, does it matter whether I set my sous vide for 102 or set it a lot hotter and therefore make the water much hotter than 102?
(I realize blix doesn't need to get to 102; I also don't care what the temperature of the water is after I lift out the developer & blix: I don't put the Patterson tank in it between agitations.)
I really struggled with high school chemistry class and now I know why.....
Thanks!