Tony Clarke
Member
- Joined
- May 27, 2009
- Messages
- 1
- Format
- 35mm
Greetings from a UK newbie. I'm about to try developing Super 8 cine film (Ektachrome 64T) in Kodak Pro E-6, which looked to be straightforward until I picked up a book on Saturday about darkroom technique. It suggested that of the materials used in making darkroom tanks, stainless steel and nylon got a X rather than a tick for exposure to bleach.
Not being used to anything involving a bleach stage (strictly a b/w negative man hitherto) this looks to be alarming. What's the problem here and how significant is it? I should say that the method being tried here is the biggest Jobo tank in a water bath with the film wound on a homebuilt insert made of polypropylene (plumbing pipe) with epoxied-on spacers of some sort of plastic - this just about gets 50' of S8 inside the tank with the useful bonus of limiting liquid inside to 2 litrs plus room for a temperature-stabilising water bath incorporated in the pipe through sealed ends and an epoxied-in screw cap.
Not being used to anything involving a bleach stage (strictly a b/w negative man hitherto) this looks to be alarming. What's the problem here and how significant is it? I should say that the method being tried here is the biggest Jobo tank in a water bath with the film wound on a homebuilt insert made of polypropylene (plumbing pipe) with epoxied-on spacers of some sort of plastic - this just about gets 50' of S8 inside the tank with the useful bonus of limiting liquid inside to 2 litrs plus room for a temperature-stabilising water bath incorporated in the pipe through sealed ends and an epoxied-in screw cap.