There is a test for purity of metol.
https://archive.org/details/photominiature14newyuoft/page/438/mode/2up?q=pyramidol&view=theater
Would potassium dichromate work as well?
That is passing weird. Sounds like metol cut with dirt. If the filtrate is clear then you should be good to go. Assuming, of course, that the substance in question is really metol. Oxidized metol is a purple-brown color and smells bad - but it will often still develop film, kinda. I have never experienced it throwing sediment. It will be interesting to see the results of the dichromate test.It seems the metol has a lot of impurities in it. When mixing up some developer, it was a dark and murky, but passing that through a coffe filter filtered out the black sediment and came out crystal clear...
One from Disactis, white powder, another bought online from Ukraine, (light) gray powder. See below in that order:There is a test for purity of metol.
Jaanus20:I have bought some metol, and it is not a white powder, like I have seen, but a dark gray, with some clumping. Is the metol oxidized and unusable for use in makig film developer?
I tested my metol from two different sources following the method pointed out above
One from Disactis, white powder, another bought online from Ukraine, (light) gray powder. See below in that order:
View attachment 416618View attachment 416619
Both have a clearly defined edge, and a yellowish center zone. The Ukrainian metol displays a off-white halo when spreading on the blotter paper, maybe related with some impurity alongside the metol (as opposed to a degradation of the metol itself). I Am Not A Chemist.
The Ukrainian stuff I know is functionally OK, performs as expected when in D-23.
Nice that you ran the test and thanks for sharing the result!
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