avandesande said:
There are other surfactents that should be completely inactive in a developer. Tween?
Tween might be in the same chemical family as the ingredient in photo flo that causes increased development rates.
I'm going to look at a specific set of antifoaming spreading agents that might be better. I have gotten 3 samples of these to try.
If they are OK and are not in the same chemical family then I will post the information.
I have a lot to do, so it may be later this summer. Sorry about that.
The chemicals that are potentially harmful are the polyethoxy ethyl alcohol derivatives. They are not really harmful as such, but can lead to increased development rates if my understanding of this is correct. It may be that the amount and the particular polymer chosen for photo flo 200 is not active in this way. I simply urge caution. Commercially, I believe that some of these are sold under the name Triton X 100.
PE