- Joined
- Apr 25, 2010
- Messages
- 462
- Format
- Multi Format
I've been trying to support Ilford as they seem to be the best bet for the future of B&W film. I live in Canada these days, and thus have been afflicted with US gallons. Remember these conflicting childhood aide-memoire rhymes:
UK: 'A pint of pure water weighs a pound and a quarter' - true for the 20oz imperial pint
US: "A pint's a pound, it's the same the world round' - no it isn't! You idiots use a 16oz pint.
Along comes metricated Ilford and sells me a litre of chemical to be mixed with four litres of water. Problem is, my US-made Datatainers hold a US gallon, which is 3.75 litres. I can take 800ml of Ilford fixer or wash aid, and mix with 3,200ml water, and discard the 250ml surplus and fill these containers to the brim. Sadly, Ilford doesn't give the number of films I should expect to fix with their litre of undiluted fixer (on the label of the bottle), so I can't figure out how many films to fix with 80% of it (clearance time for film leaders doesn't work for sheet film). My current 'fix' (pun intended) is to pour all the litre of fixer or wash aid into my US gallon container, add as much water as will fit, and assume it's good for 20 films or 20 pairs of 4x5 negs. If I'm then throwing it out prematurely, that will be to the good of Ilford's bottom line.
It would be very helpful if Ilford would include information on the bottle's label for folk in north America, who have to convert amounts, cope with odd volumes, and cross their fingers for the results. If Ilford sales in north America exceed those in Europe, it might be worth altering the volumes sold to match, but I'd rather hold out for the USA to metricate (even get behind SI units, a mere 55 years behind the times!) I still intend to buy Ilford chemicals, but it would be nice if they could help me out a little when I do so.
Chris
UK: 'A pint of pure water weighs a pound and a quarter' - true for the 20oz imperial pint
US: "A pint's a pound, it's the same the world round' - no it isn't! You idiots use a 16oz pint.
Along comes metricated Ilford and sells me a litre of chemical to be mixed with four litres of water. Problem is, my US-made Datatainers hold a US gallon, which is 3.75 litres. I can take 800ml of Ilford fixer or wash aid, and mix with 3,200ml water, and discard the 250ml surplus and fill these containers to the brim. Sadly, Ilford doesn't give the number of films I should expect to fix with their litre of undiluted fixer (on the label of the bottle), so I can't figure out how many films to fix with 80% of it (clearance time for film leaders doesn't work for sheet film). My current 'fix' (pun intended) is to pour all the litre of fixer or wash aid into my US gallon container, add as much water as will fit, and assume it's good for 20 films or 20 pairs of 4x5 negs. If I'm then throwing it out prematurely, that will be to the good of Ilford's bottom line.
It would be very helpful if Ilford would include information on the bottle's label for folk in north America, who have to convert amounts, cope with odd volumes, and cross their fingers for the results. If Ilford sales in north America exceed those in Europe, it might be worth altering the volumes sold to match, but I'd rather hold out for the USA to metricate (even get behind SI units, a mere 55 years behind the times!) I still intend to buy Ilford chemicals, but it would be nice if they could help me out a little when I do so.
Chris
