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Having read many of the threads re: 777 and Rodinal, where there's clearly some question as to what chemicals are used in each formula, I thought I'd pass along some information found on Neofin Blue that I bought in Belgium a couple of years ago. Someone -- maybe Tetenal or maybe the importer -- had placed a new product label on the bottles, on which specific chemicals were stipulated as being in the formula. Seems that this info was being revealed because of stated toxicity concerns. The label is multi-lingual French/German.
Anyway, here's what the label said is in Neofin Blue:
2.2 % Natriumsulfit (which Google tells me is sodium sulphite)
0.9% 4-Methylaminophenol H2SO4 (which www.chemindustry.com reveals to be Metol/Elon/etc.)
0.4% 1-Phenyl-3-Pyrozolidinon (which gets no hits when googled)
My copy of the Dignan 150 Formula book suggests that Neofin Blue is some sort of Beutler variant, and the Beutler formula provided does contain Sodium Sulphite and Metol -- though in different relative proportions. Unless 1-Phenyl-3-Pyrozolidinon is Sodium Carbonate, which I doubt, it seems that Neofin has something in it that Beutler does not. I see the magic letters "pyro" but I lack the chemical background to know what 1-Phenyl-3-Pyrozolidinon really is.
A final caveat: I have no idea what the minimum amount of product must be in order that it must be listed on this label, so I suppose that there could be other ingredients that are of such small quantity that they didn't have to be listed.
Anyone have any ideas on what the mystery ingredient is, and whether it's important enough that we can say that Neofin is not Beutler's?
Anyway, here's what the label said is in Neofin Blue:
2.2 % Natriumsulfit (which Google tells me is sodium sulphite)
0.9% 4-Methylaminophenol H2SO4 (which www.chemindustry.com reveals to be Metol/Elon/etc.)
0.4% 1-Phenyl-3-Pyrozolidinon (which gets no hits when googled)
My copy of the Dignan 150 Formula book suggests that Neofin Blue is some sort of Beutler variant, and the Beutler formula provided does contain Sodium Sulphite and Metol -- though in different relative proportions. Unless 1-Phenyl-3-Pyrozolidinon is Sodium Carbonate, which I doubt, it seems that Neofin has something in it that Beutler does not. I see the magic letters "pyro" but I lack the chemical background to know what 1-Phenyl-3-Pyrozolidinon really is.
A final caveat: I have no idea what the minimum amount of product must be in order that it must be listed on this label, so I suppose that there could be other ingredients that are of such small quantity that they didn't have to be listed.
Anyone have any ideas on what the mystery ingredient is, and whether it's important enough that we can say that Neofin is not Beutler's?