Donald Qualls
Subscriber
@Nodda Duma suggested I look in the archives for old advice from Photo Engineer about room temperature RA-4 processing. I searched -- Photrio search, Google search -- and found nothing relevant on this forum or from Ron/PE.
Based on Naked Photographer videos (@Greg Davis I'm talking about you), it seems as though it's just a matter of developing and blixing long enough, but I still have a couple questions (looking ahead; I just ordered a Colourtronic 8x10 daylight drum, haven't yet ordered paper or chemistry).
I see in Kodak's RA-4 documents that their recommendation runs from 27C to 36C, with longer process time at the lower temperatures (as expected). Can I reasonably presume that going down to 20C (or so -- my darkroom tends to run 17-19C) just requires processing even longer, because we're developing to completion? Also, is it possible or practical to use C-41 bleach and fixer vs. a blix? Longer life, and I have it already on hand.
Alternatively, it appears the Colourtronic drum was made to hold heat well, such that preheating the drum would let it stay warm long enough for processing at warmed chemistry temperatures. Tempering bath I've got (though my sous vide has an annoying blue display and status lights, so it would have to be off during paper handling). Is there a significant advantage to working at, say, 35C vs. room temperature, other than speed?
Based on Naked Photographer videos (@Greg Davis I'm talking about you), it seems as though it's just a matter of developing and blixing long enough, but I still have a couple questions (looking ahead; I just ordered a Colourtronic 8x10 daylight drum, haven't yet ordered paper or chemistry).
I see in Kodak's RA-4 documents that their recommendation runs from 27C to 36C, with longer process time at the lower temperatures (as expected). Can I reasonably presume that going down to 20C (or so -- my darkroom tends to run 17-19C) just requires processing even longer, because we're developing to completion? Also, is it possible or practical to use C-41 bleach and fixer vs. a blix? Longer life, and I have it already on hand.
Alternatively, it appears the Colourtronic drum was made to hold heat well, such that preheating the drum would let it stay warm long enough for processing at warmed chemistry temperatures. Tempering bath I've got (though my sous vide has an annoying blue display and status lights, so it would have to be off during paper handling). Is there a significant advantage to working at, say, 35C vs. room temperature, other than speed?