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John, I hope that is an air-tight safe!
i keep it outside, just in case!
John, I hope that is an air-tight safe!
I think this is the most likely answer. If you, like I, mix your chemicals at the maximum recommended temperature, say 80F, and then seal the bottle and let it cool, it will contract.In a closed container, there is an equilibrium between the pressure of the gas in the bottle and the vapor pressure of the liquid. The vapor pressure of the liquid can change considerably with changes in ambient temp. Thus causing the plastic bottle to 'cave in' when it is cold and 'bulge' when it is hot.
I do not believe that 21% of oxygen manages to get into the chemicals. That's just improbable. Barometric pressure changes is much more likely.
Although Dancqu loves single shot fixers,
I prefer using two-bath fixing.
I do not believe that 21% of oxygen manages to get into the chemicals.
By the way, I walked into a walk-in refridgerator at work a couple Mondays ago that someone had put several pounds of dry ice into on the previous Friday. The the room was full of "air" but it had about 17% oxygen instead of the 21% my body was expecting. I noticed the taste of the air was odd, and about a minute later, I was feeling a little tight in the chest. I found what I was looking for and left the room, and felt like I was going to pass out about 30 second later. Pretty odd sensation. Good think there was still some oxygen left... At least I now know what being at the top of Everest is like now!
A good way to do that is to see if it will clear a small clipping of film. The leader that is cut off the 35mm roll when loading the tank is perfect for this; doesn't matter if it has been exposed. The test? Does it clear, or doesn't it?
Sounds like a really dangerous situation. The labs I've worked in have always kept dry-ice in its own ice-chest in a well-ventilated area, or even outside.
Your symptoms were likely only partly due to oxygen deprivation -- I am more inclined to blame mild CO2 poisoning. Suffocation by CO2 can happen even in the presence of lots of oxygen (acidification of the blood, etc.)
Dry-ice is definitely a substance to be respected -- I always try to remind my self that 44 g of the stuff "wants to be" 22-odd litres of suffocating gas. (PV=nRT and all that)
I wanted to thank you for this tip. Since I went shooting today I had all of my chemicals out and I had a chance to try it. A small clip from film was submerged into the fixer and it cleared in few minutes. I am assuming by "clear" I am supposed to check if all of the emulsion materials gone and all that is left is the base film material. It was.
A good way to do that is to see if it will clear a small
clipping of film. The leader that is cut off the 35mm roll
when loading the tank is perfect for this; doesn't matter
if it has been exposed. ... Does it clear, or doesn't it?
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