Donald Qualls
Subscriber
Okay, we all know that there's considerable controversy over whether stop bath is needed, or beneficial, or best avoided in favor of a plain water wash (for film -- for paper, there seems to be no objection).
Regardless of that argument, if you're not using a commercially formulated indicator stop bath, you either need to one-shot the bath (wasteful, as in most cases it has enough acidity reserve to stop development dozens of times -- and even then, if you're printing, you don't know where you stand during a long printing session) -- or you need to add an indicator.
It turns out bromocresol purple, the indicator used in most commercial indicator stop bath concentrates, isn't hard to come by, but harder is knowing how much you need. It clearly needs to color the solution enough that you can easily see, in a white tray or clear bottle, when it starts to turn from yellow to purple as the pH rises above 5.2 -- but how much is that, in grams per liter of working solution? I'm guessing not much, but is that milligrams or micrograms, and how many?
Regardless of that argument, if you're not using a commercially formulated indicator stop bath, you either need to one-shot the bath (wasteful, as in most cases it has enough acidity reserve to stop development dozens of times -- and even then, if you're printing, you don't know where you stand during a long printing session) -- or you need to add an indicator.
It turns out bromocresol purple, the indicator used in most commercial indicator stop bath concentrates, isn't hard to come by, but harder is knowing how much you need. It clearly needs to color the solution enough that you can easily see, in a white tray or clear bottle, when it starts to turn from yellow to purple as the pH rises above 5.2 -- but how much is that, in grams per liter of working solution? I'm guessing not much, but is that milligrams or micrograms, and how many?