Keith Tapscott.
Member
I was thinking that myself.
This will bring the chemists out in force.
In some cases, you can actually see visually what happens; e.g. when washing out dichromate stain from a gelatin emulsion. This is a slow process when using tap water, but tap water with a little carbonate added to it speeds this up nearly infinitely. From a theoretical viewpoint, I also don't agree with the notion that the fact gelatin emulsions are more hardened today would somehow render an alkaline wash aid ineffective. A hardened emulsion still swells more in an alkaline environment than a pH neutral environment. As such, it will still speed up washing of the emulsion. I emphasize the latter bit because I don't know what, if any, effect there is on wash effectiveness of the fiber base of FB papers.There are several studies that investigated the washing accelerating properties of alkaline bath. For example, Crabtree compared sodium hydroxide, ammonium hydroxide, sodium carbonate, Kodalk (sodium metaborate), and distilled water. This result was probably valid at that time, but the factors involved in washing property of fixed film and paper are somewhat different nowadays, because today's emulsions are highly hardened during manufacturing and use of hardener is becoming uncommon in manual processing. Therefore, it's probably not very meaningful to discuss those methods in detail. If there is anything worthy of noting, it is probably that Crabtree found that ammonium hydroxide was most effective of those.
As such, it will still speed up washing of the emulsion. I emphasize the latter bit because I don't know what, if any, effect there is on wash effectiveness of the fiber base of FB papers.
what is an acceptable water ph when mixing your own darkroom chemicals from the tap?
Doesn't matter. The buffering capacity of tap water is virtually zero.
The things in tap water you should/might/could be concerned about would be stuff like iron ions. Commercial photo chemistry contains sequestering agents to capture those and prevent them from wreaking havoc. DIY chemistry that omits these may have a shorter lifespan and may in some cases only be used once if reliability is required (e.g. ascorbate-based developers). And provided they're mixed with tap water.
Long story short - ignore the pH of your tap water. It's not a relevant piece of information.
With lists like these there's always the question what should or shouldn't be included. It's an endless discussion.
You don't need Sodium Bisuphite, it's low grade Sodium Metabisulphite.
Ian
Some of these are used in FX-21.Well, you also don't need citrate, because (1) it's rarely used in developers and (2) if so, it can easily be made in situ using citric acid.
Boric acid is likewise not something particularly necessary. And out of the metaborate/borax pair, either will do just fine.
Potassium iodide is likewise not a very common ingredient and especially when doing B&W work, it's easy to avoid its necessity. But it's cheap, so what gives.
Potassium carbonate is nice if you need to make something concentrated; in all other instances, sodium carbonate will suffice.
On the other hand, it's convenient to have some form of acid on hand; acetic and/or citric acid make good sense.
But, you know...
One thing I don't understand is the lack of PH monitoring. We all know that the PH is important enough that sometimes minute amounts of chemicals are included in formulas just for changes in PH. Yet we all have different water, I would guess that most people use tap water, that varies from place to place and time of year to time of year. For my beer brewing I have to have precise PH and a digital PH meter. I find that very tiny amounts of various chemicals make very large PH shifts. So why doesn't every formula give a target PH and why isn't a good PH meter an essential tool?
One thing I don't understand is the lack of PH monitoring. We all know that the PH is important enough that sometimes minute amounts of chemicals are included in formulas just for changes in PH. Yet we all have different water, I would guess that most people use tap water, that varies from place to place and time of year to time of year. For my beer brewing I have to have precise PH and a digital PH meter. I find that very tiny amounts of various chemicals make very large PH shifts. So why doesn't every formula give a target PH and why isn't a good PH meter an essential tool?
One thing which would be advantageous to me but it seems impractical is to mix my Rapid Fix, We use a lot of Hypam here and 5 liter bottles go through our facility
quite quickly. Years ago I had a technician working with me who decided mixing rapid fix was the idea for us from scratch.. I seem to remember it being lengthly and about the same cost.
Not sure if others here mix their Dev (Multigrade) and Fix ( Hypam) but would be interesting to here your thoughts on this.
Not sure if others here mix their Dev (Multigrade) and Fix ( Hypam) but would be interesting to here your thoughts on this.
One thing which would be advantageous to me but it seems impractical is to mix my Rapid Fix, We use a lot of Hypam here and 5 liter bottles go through our facility
quite quickly. Years ago I had a technician working with me who decided mixing rapid fix was the idea for us from scratch.. I seem to remember it being lengthly and about the same cost.
Not sure if others here mix their Dev (Multigrade) and Fix ( Hypam) but would be interesting to here your thoughts on this.
If we're ever able to get Flexicolor III fixer again in moderate-size quantities for home use without buying a full kit, I suspect that will blow any of this math away and make it a no-brainer for those who have in the past used everything.
Bob,
If you can find a Canadian source, this might be another option for you:
https://kodak.photosys.com/collecti...ixer-solution-part-a-to-make-20l-cat-105-9914
View attachment 388389
Given the sort of volumes Bob might need, this might be a solution for 50 litres of working strength:
https://kodak.photosys.com/collecti...odak-color-negative-fixer-and-replenisher-25l
View attachment 388460
Again, subject to getting it in Canada.
@Carnie Bob in general C41 fixer is very suitable as an all-purpose fixer. It's a near-pH neutral, non-hardening rapid fixer. This goes for Kodak, Fuji and other big-brand C41 fixers.
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