runswithsizzers
Subscriber
Given a fixer solution that is pale yellow, clear, and has no precipitate, does the film fixer clearing test prove the solution is still capable of adequately fixing film?
tl;dr
I have an unopened bottle of rapid fixer. According to the manufactirer's batch code, the fixer was made in Aug 2019 and has a recommended shelf life of 2 years. So the use-by date was Aug 2021. Since I've had it (Feb 2020), the fixer has been in a cool basement (65*-75*F/18-24*C), which is dim, but not totally dark.
Today, I mixed up a working solution of the fixer and did the "Film Fixer Clip Test" on a piece of fresh Ilford Delta 400 following the procedure posted <here>. Using dry film, the time was almost exactly 1 minute. Then I prewet the film and repeated the test, getting about 35 seconds. So, the fixer looks OK, right?
Except... When I contacted the manufacturer to decode the batch number, I was told,
"You could try a clearing test with a piece of film - but even thats not an ideal test - as we couldn't guarantee it will be archivally stable when notably old - even if it clears films in the times we guide (2-5mins) ... Personally, I think its unfortunately not worth risking..."
To say the test is not "ideal" is not very specific, but the tech is uncomfortable with it for some reason. I think it is probably just a case of being conservative, as company employees are no doubt trained to be - but she is the expert and I am not, so...?
Is a good clip test result all I need to know, or is there more to it than that?
tl;dr
I have an unopened bottle of rapid fixer. According to the manufactirer's batch code, the fixer was made in Aug 2019 and has a recommended shelf life of 2 years. So the use-by date was Aug 2021. Since I've had it (Feb 2020), the fixer has been in a cool basement (65*-75*F/18-24*C), which is dim, but not totally dark.
Today, I mixed up a working solution of the fixer and did the "Film Fixer Clip Test" on a piece of fresh Ilford Delta 400 following the procedure posted <here>. Using dry film, the time was almost exactly 1 minute. Then I prewet the film and repeated the test, getting about 35 seconds. So, the fixer looks OK, right?
Except... When I contacted the manufacturer to decode the batch number, I was told,
"You could try a clearing test with a piece of film - but even thats not an ideal test - as we couldn't guarantee it will be archivally stable when notably old - even if it clears films in the times we guide (2-5mins) ... Personally, I think its unfortunately not worth risking..."
To say the test is not "ideal" is not very specific, but the tech is uncomfortable with it for some reason. I think it is probably just a case of being conservative, as company employees are no doubt trained to be - but she is the expert and I am not, so...?
Is a good clip test result all I need to know, or is there more to it than that?
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