pbromaghin
Subscriber
No, no, no. You must mix it all to make the stock solution.
Why on earth do I need to do that? The powder keeps just fine.
No, no, no. You must mix it all to make the stock solution.
With careful and accurate measuring they will not vary to any significant degree. This isn't rocket science.
I wouldn't worry about using a stainless steel cooking saucepan to heat distilled water for mixing a developer.
Why not just warm the water till 52°C in water kettle and mix the chemicals in 750ml of warm water in a beaker and fill the remaining with cold water?
Why 750ml? That's less than 1/4 of a gallon. My understanding is that 3/4 of a gallon (3000ml) of water need to be heated, the powder is then stirred in, then a final 1/4 of water (1000ml) is poured in.Why not just warm the water till 52°C in water kettle and mix the chemicals in 750ml of warm water in a beaker and fill the remaining with cold water?
Because he has a one litre packet of D76, not a gallon one.Why 750ml? That's less than 1/4 of a gallon. My understanding is that 3/4 of a gallon (3000ml) of water need to be heated, the powder is then stirred in, then a final 1/4 of water (1000ml) is poured in.
Has anyone tried mixing D-76 with distilled water, then with non-distilled but boiled tap water and find any differences? Also wondering how important it is for the water to be distilled at developing stage (for dilution).
Ah okay, very good info thanks! Makes me feel a lot more relaxed, I'm pretty scared of messing up my negatives since I come from the safety of the digital world.If you are mixing the commercial product (ie Kodak package), it should make no meaningful difference whether or not you use tap, boiled tap, or distilled water unless your tap water is extremely bad. The packaged product is designed to work when mixed and/or diluted with a relatively wide range of water types, and contains compounds to deal with things like varying water hardness. I have tried mixing a number of formulas (including D-76) with tap vs store-bought distilled water and found no differences.
Distilled water is fine, but tap water should be fine too. Don't overcomplicate this, and pay no attention to how this guy or that guy does it. There is no need for any fancy gymnastics, and there is plenty of latitude. Simply follow the mixing directions on the package and you will be fine.
Because he has a one litre packet of D76, not a gallon one.
Ohh okay, I didn't even know a one-litre packet existed! So I guess I'll multiply your numbers by 3.78!See my earlier post on this!
PE
Haha funny how that goes. I think the internet is a blessing cause the packet doesn't specify what kind of water, what to mix things in, what to avoid etc. For example the packet doesn't say to avoid bronze/aluminum and whatnot.Wow, 50 years ago, we just read the instructions on the package and it worked perfect. Now a days, its the internet, lots of weird advise, and confusion. Progress?![]()
All you need is a kettle of boiling water, a plastic bucket, stirring rod and a cold tap.
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