I've read literally scores of posts here regarding fixer for fiber paper... and I thought gay marriage and guns were controversial. (Hey, I'm a liberal in Texas!)
I'm about to do some Bromoils using plain Hypo as fixer (suggested by some to make inking easier, and controversial as well, some say rapid fix is just fine).
I've found a wide range of suggested exhaustion for hypo (penta) at 250G/liter - ranging from 10-20 8x10's. Doing the standard leader test and monitoring clearing time for doubling of time to clear sounds reasonable. But does that address the 2 sides of fixer life, which I understand to be fixer exhaustion vs. silver level?
Then I came across this APUG post (didn't record the author in my notes):
"...suppose you took a sheet of photo paper, put a penny every 2cm or so, then expose it to a very bright light, the emulsion will turn darker on it's own, cut it into squares, and keep it in an old paper box. Before starting a session, you do the same test, when the circle from the penny disappears, that's your clear time. if it takes too long, replace the fixer."
Now throw in that I'll use rapid fix for all regular printing and plain hypo just for bromoil matrices (which I'm doing around 11x14 size)... which go through the additional bleach and fix steps. I'd like to at least entertain the ability to use the fixer from my initial printing of matrices for the post-bleach fixing, so a reliable way to test fixer would be welcomed. (Initial test prints I can do with rapid fix as those get discarded).
As a side question - for bromoil work, is 2-bath fixing necessary for the initial exposure steps? Necessary for the post-bleach fixing? Does the bleaching, re-fixing and final washing make the initial fixing less important - is a basic shot in the fixer going to be fine for a print that is about to be re-washed and bleached and fixed again? I'm an err on the side of caution type, but if wasting time & materials can be avoided, I'm in. Thanks for any insights!
I'm about to do some Bromoils using plain Hypo as fixer (suggested by some to make inking easier, and controversial as well, some say rapid fix is just fine).
I've found a wide range of suggested exhaustion for hypo (penta) at 250G/liter - ranging from 10-20 8x10's. Doing the standard leader test and monitoring clearing time for doubling of time to clear sounds reasonable. But does that address the 2 sides of fixer life, which I understand to be fixer exhaustion vs. silver level?
Then I came across this APUG post (didn't record the author in my notes):
"...suppose you took a sheet of photo paper, put a penny every 2cm or so, then expose it to a very bright light, the emulsion will turn darker on it's own, cut it into squares, and keep it in an old paper box. Before starting a session, you do the same test, when the circle from the penny disappears, that's your clear time. if it takes too long, replace the fixer."
Now throw in that I'll use rapid fix for all regular printing and plain hypo just for bromoil matrices (which I'm doing around 11x14 size)... which go through the additional bleach and fix steps. I'd like to at least entertain the ability to use the fixer from my initial printing of matrices for the post-bleach fixing, so a reliable way to test fixer would be welcomed. (Initial test prints I can do with rapid fix as those get discarded).
As a side question - for bromoil work, is 2-bath fixing necessary for the initial exposure steps? Necessary for the post-bleach fixing? Does the bleaching, re-fixing and final washing make the initial fixing less important - is a basic shot in the fixer going to be fine for a print that is about to be re-washed and bleached and fixed again? I'm an err on the side of caution type, but if wasting time & materials can be avoided, I'm in. Thanks for any insights!
