RalphLambrecht
Subscriber
I was trying to get this thread back to photography.
That tiny bit of ice on that thin outer crust of earth,
shifting earth's center of gravity noticeably?
But we know the photographically relevant answer already!![]()
Well, Ralph, lead us on! What more would you like to discuss?
That's a good question! I don't know!
I do know that temperature is a main driving force. There was an article in Photo Techniques in the 90s about washing paper and film that tested many of these issues. I think it was called "The Mystery of the Vortex" or something like that.
That's a good question! I don't know!
I do know that temperature is a main driving force. There was an article in Photo Techniques in the 90s about washing paper and film that tested many of these issues. I think it was called "The Mystery of the Vortex" or something like that.
The differences between cascade washing vs running water for example. Who has test results to compare both methods?
I find it problematic in these kind of discussions that people are talking about how powerful or efficient a given washing method is. But, there are at least two different goals; washing in least time, or washing with least water. For some people, efficient and powerful system is quick and for others, it uses only little water. Both are not possible at the same time.
This is where you're wrong and both Ilford, Kodak and Agfa all have (or had) their recommendations. Efficient washing with shorter times can be done without excessive use of water.
...but I think the problem there is the time that the top of the reel(s) spend in the water is less than the time the bottom is filled. So unless the tank is filled rather quickly and the volume of water is held in contact with the film for an extended time (which most automated dump and fill washers do not do very well), then one may have good washing on the bottom reels and poor washing on the top reels...
Ralph, what about development, if Kirk's right then the bottom edge of a sheet of film would be denser than top, in practice it's only really an issue in the tallest Paterson tanks. That's with inversion agitation.
Ian
Ralph, what about development, if Kirk's right then the bottom edge of a sheet of film would be denser than top, in practice it's only really an issue in the tallest Paterson tanks. That's with inversion agitation.
Ian
Have I missed something?
I was talking about the automated dump and fill washers - I've not seen many of them out there, but I assumed you were talking about those.
As long as you maintain water against the film - and you dump it all out between changes, you'll get the most efficent washing. Then you're limited by the time the amount of time needed for the diffusion process to take place.
The way I see it - hypo is basically salt.
I find it problematic in these kind of discussions that people are
talking about how powerful or efficient a given washing method is.
But, there are at least two different goals; washing in least time, or
washing with least water. For some people, efficient and powerful
system is quick and for others, it uses only little water. Both are
not possible at the same time. Sometimes washing result is
mixed in as a parameter, but it shouldn't. Different
approaches should be compared so that the
washing result is same ....
People who have lots of water, may use running water to keep fresh
water on the film surface to enable quick diffusion all the time.
On the other hand, the same level of total washing can be achieved
with much less water if no running water is used, by letting the
diffusion reach the equilibrium and then changing the water.
But the diffusion gets slower and slower when it gets
closer to the equilibrium.
...The method I've adopted uses the least amount of water and the least amount of time in attendance. No magic, for FB paper, long still water soaks using print separators. Little water is used so it is jugged and at room temperature. The last soak is over night. Dan
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