ymc226
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Permawash and all other 'hypo clearing agents' will go off with exposure to air. The S. Sulfite oxidizes to S. Sulfate.
It is important to be careful about making generalizations about the various washing aids. While the end result, that is the reduction of thiosulfate ion in film and papers is the same, their mode of action is not. If you look at the MSDS for Permawash you will find that it does not contain sodium sulfite.
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Heico Permawash does contain ammonium sulfite BUT at the recommended dilution of 1+43 the sulfite concentration is too low to have the same action as the sodium sulfite in HCA. The action of Permawash is due to the surfactant and other chemicals (trade secrets) where the action of HCA is due to the sulfite.
The way I understand, there are two main types of wash agent for film and paper. ... I have been mixing Heico Perma-Wash on a per-batch basis, straight from the bottle, using 23 ml of concentrate to a liter of water ... I expect a quart bottle to last a good, long time.
To the folks who found Permawash not to work well - I assume you are talking about residual hypo tests in comparison with HCA (or similar) for the same treatment and wash times??
Could you elaborate on which tests? The one I used (and I don't have it anymore, so I can't look at which it was) said that if you used something like Permawash, then the test wouldn't be accurate because it will react with something left by it as well as with residual fixer.Originally Posted by Mark Crabtree (there was a url link here which no longer exists)To the folks who found Permawash not to work well - I assume you are talking about residual hypo tests in comparison with HCA (or similar) for the same treatment and wash times??
Yes
fully agreeNicholas, I think i remember reading that the product called Calgon is actually not the same in all parts of the world. I don't remember where I read it. Richard Knoppow from time to time posted on the pure-silver list a formula like the one you have given but with EDTA instead of Calgon. From one of his posts:
<start quote>
Sodium Sulfite, dessicated 100 grams
Sodium Bisulfite 20 grams
EDTA tetra-sodium salt 1 gram
Sodium Citrate 1 gram
Water to make 1 liter
<end quote>
And from Ryuji Suzuki's now-defunct web site:
<start quote>
Kodak Hypo Clearing Agent contains EDTA and sodium citrate to reduce the calcium scum. With hard water, sulfite in the wash aid forms insoluble calcium scum unless EDTA is added. These are also useful in preventing precipitation of aluminium hardener that may be carried over from the fixer (if acid hardening fixer is used).
<end quote>
I just use the sulphite plus a little metabisulphite (=bisulphite). Very cheap if you mix from bulk chemicals, and toss it at the end of the day.
How long does the sodium sulfite last in powder form? I bought a 19L pack of Kodak HCA because I couldn't get anything smaller. I mix half a teaspoon just prior to using. Does the powder oxidize too, or is that only if you mix it with water?
Seeing the thread today about Selenium toner led me to google up related questions. And this old thread popped up. Referring to one of the posts as quoted leads me to ask a question. The poster claims he just spoons out a small amount of Kodak HCA powder and mixes it as needed. Now we all know you can't do that with powdered developer for instance because a relable equality of distribution of the various components can never be known. Is it not the same problem with HCA? Or was the poster ignorant and didn't know you can't do this? Is the HCA powder out of the package a homogenous compound allowing small portions to be spooned out?
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