"What always seems to get lost in these (all too frequent) APUG discussions about darkroom chemicals and septic systems is that a septic system is a highly reducing environment full of sulfide ion. Any hexavalent chromium is going to be rapidly reduced to either the trivalent or divalent state and depositied as highly insoluble sulfides. None is going to get into the ground water. They will remain as a sludge until the tank is pumped out. The same goes for silver, selenium, and most other metal ions. Sewage treatment plants have a similar reducing environment."
Gerald C Koch, Are there B&W Chemicals that are Safe for Septic Tanks?, (there was a url link here which no longer exists), 03/07/2011
This is in complete agreement with the previously published citation. Again, it's not about justifying one's skirting of sanitation laws. It's about falsely implying that normal use of a home b&w darkroom may destroy one's septic system in as little as three years, and the unintended damage such a false assertion may cause to Billy's new interest in film developing.
These are two different issues entirely.
Ken
Gerald C Koch, Are there B&W Chemicals that are Safe for Septic Tanks?, (there was a url link here which no longer exists), 03/07/2011
This is in complete agreement with the previously published citation. Again, it's not about justifying one's skirting of sanitation laws. It's about falsely implying that normal use of a home b&w darkroom may destroy one's septic system in as little as three years, and the unintended damage such a false assertion may cause to Billy's new interest in film developing.
These are two different issues entirely.
Ken
