Hi everyone! I figure we are all permitted a really dumb question once in a while so here is mine! (Have looked in the forum but cannot find the answer!)
I am planing on trying Pyrocat HD in Propylene Glycol. The regular Pyrocat formula I have seen recommends mixing 1:1:100....so question one: Would the Glycol version be mixed the same way?
Ok: now the really dumb question...What does 1:1:100 actually mean if you want to end up with 400ml of developer? (ie for use in a small tank).
That's what photoformulary says. Dilute 1:1:100 which means 1 part of A, 1 part of B, and 100 parts water. So you mix 4 ml of part A, 4 ml of part B, and 400 ml of water. You will get 408 ml of solution but that's "close enough for government work" as they say.
The glycol mix should be diluted just as if it were the water mix.
1:1:100 usually means 1 part Pyrocat + 1 part alkali + 100 parts water. If you make it 4ml Pyrocat + 4 ml alkali + water to make 400 ml you'll never notice the difference. Or, you could start with 400 ml water, add 4 ml Pyrocat and 4 ml alkali and discard the excess 8 ml.
You could also start with 392ml of water, add 4ml of A and 4ml of B. (Or start with something else, like 300ml of water, add A and B, and then top up to 400ml.) That's not technically 1+1+400 -- it's 1+1+392 -- but it'll be close enough to make no difference in the times you use.