Bruce Osgood Membership Council Member Joined Sep 9, 2002 Messages 2,642 Location Brooklyn, N.Y. Format Multi Format Sep 4, 2005 #1 Are the amounts published in the Chemistry Recipes section to be used with Staining Developers such as Pyro, Pyrocat, etc.?
Are the amounts published in the Chemistry Recipes section to be used with Staining Developers such as Pyro, Pyrocat, etc.?
Tom Hoskinson Member Joined Mar 7, 2004 Messages 3,867 Location Southern Cal Format Multi Format Sep 4, 2005 #2 Bruce (Camclicker) said: Are the amounts published in the Chemistry Recipes section to be used with Staining Developers such as Pyro, Pyrocat, etc.? Click to expand... Yes, just use the standard "fix for 2X the clearing time" rule.
Bruce (Camclicker) said: Are the amounts published in the Chemistry Recipes section to be used with Staining Developers such as Pyro, Pyrocat, etc.? Click to expand... Yes, just use the standard "fix for 2X the clearing time" rule.
Maine-iac Member Joined Oct 12, 2004 Messages 462 Location Island Heigh Format Med. Format RF Sep 6, 2005 #3 Is Ole's formula for quick-fix to be used undiluted or diluted? If diluted, what ratio? Larry
Claire Senft Member Joined Dec 7, 2004 Messages 3,239 Location Milwaukee, W Format 35mm Sep 6, 2005 #4 Why not ask Ole?
Tom Hoskinson Member Joined Mar 7, 2004 Messages 3,867 Location Southern Cal Format Multi Format Sep 6, 2005 #5 Ole responded to that question in one of the Apug threads. The answer is: Undiluted.
Ole Moderator Moderator Joined Sep 9, 2002 Messages 9,245 Location Bergen, Norway Format Large Format Sep 6, 2005 #6 Undiluted, or sometimes diluted 1+1. I do that when processing lots of paper - fixing takes longer, but capacity is higher. I rarely worry about capacity unless I need to do a lot of prints in one go.
Undiluted, or sometimes diluted 1+1. I do that when processing lots of paper - fixing takes longer, but capacity is higher. I rarely worry about capacity unless I need to do a lot of prints in one go.