Looking for Printol 12 or similar formula

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wildbill

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I've contacted Nacco, who I've been told is out of business. I'm awaiting a reply. I got a list of components from the safety sheet, now I'd like to get the formula. If i can't I'll try mixing Ansco 130.
Ingrediants:
sodium sulfite
potassium carbonate
hydroquinone
1-phenyl-2-pryazolidinone aka Phenidone, right?

If i can't get it, what's closest to Printol 12 or what's that developer most similar to? I really liked the characteristics from long shelf life, long tray life, cheap as hell, and the results on paper.

thanks

vinny
 

Tom Hoskinson

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Ian Grant

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ID-62 is the Formula Tom's referring to. It's the PQ variant of ID-20 a Standard MQ Print developer.

Ilford ID-62

For Bromide Paper.
Stock Solution
Warm water (125° F or 52 °C) ----------- 750.0 ml
Sodium Sulphite, anhyd ----------------- 50.0 gm
Hydroquinone---------------------------- 12.0 gm
Phenidone------------------------------- 0.5 gm
Sodium Carbonate,anhydrous------------- 60.0 gm
Potassium Bromide------------------------ 2.0 gm
Benzotriazole (1% solution) ---------------20 ml
Water to make -------------------------- 1 litre

To use. Enlarger papers 1:3 with water - Neutral/Blue black tones

With no Benzotriazole and additional Bromide the developer becomes ID-78 which is warm tone
 

Tom Hoskinson

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Don't give up, mix up a batch of ID-62 and use it.
 

Ian Grant

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It's worth mentioning that often in liquid concentrates the Carbonate is partially substituted by Sodium or Potassium Hydroxide, this helps solubility and cuts production costs.

ID-62 has been copied by other manufacturers, Forte FD-203 is the same formula but with no Benzotriazole. Using Potassium Carbonate instead of Sodium Carbonate will give a very slight increase in warmth.

Ian
 
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