Bruce (Camclicker) said:Hi Lee,
Your 1040 mL Liter, is that for one load of negatives? How many negatives do you do in the 1040? You don't use some, and store the rest do you?
noseoil said:Steve,
Still not clear to me how the stuff is being used. If you mix one batch, develop one sheet, start over with a second sheet after processing the first, then functionally you are using it twice. Mix once. Develop once. Dump. If you are doing sequential development with one batch, that is the problem. Do both sheets at once, or cut your volume in half and mix the second batch when you are ready for the second sheet. Add "B" to ["A" plus water] which can sit for a little while, if using distilled water. Don't let the mixed solution sit mixed for a while and then develop. tim
Steve Hamley said:I work at a national lab that's full of chemists. They tell me that there should be no diference in doing 2 sheets at once versus two sheets in sequence with the same quart of developer in a tray unless the developer is oxidizing in the tray in the 30 minutes it takes to do two sheets in sequence. All that matters is having a sufficient quantity of active chemical to develop the given area of film. If the developer oxidizes to uselessness in 30 minutes in a tray, it's time to switch, although I'm beginning to suspect my stock solutions are just too old....
Steve Hamley said:Tim,
I work at a national lab that's full of chemists. They tell me that there should be no diference in doing 2 sheets at once versus two sheets in sequence with the same quart of developer in a tray unless the developer is oxidizing in the tray in the 30 minutes it takes to do two sheets in sequence. All that matters is having a sufficient quantity of active chemical to develop the given area of film. If the developer oxidizes to uselessness in 30 minutes in a tray, it's time to switch, although I'm beginning to suspect my stock solutions are just too old.
Here's how I've been using it, step-by-step.
Mix 1 quart Pyrocat HD 2:2:100 from PF liquid using distilled water. Solutions measured using a volute so there's no cross contamination, last batch add 20ml "A" to a rinsed 1-quart bottle, add nearly a full quart distilled water, then add 20 ml "B". 1000 ml total. Shake well, stored in a closed 1-quart container and used within an hour although I typically use it quicker than this.
Put 1 quart developer in an 11x14 tray.
Develop first sheet of 8x10, stop and fix.
Develop second sheet in same 1 quart solution, stop and fix.
So 1 quart should be enough since the recommended volume is 300ml per 8x10 sheet.
Steve
noseoil said:Steve, sorry, I'm just a dumb construction worker. The only experience I have with chemicals ended years ago, although I do a bit of experimentation with a stout once in a while on weekends! tim
I agree "the chemsitry is too cheap to worry about trying to reuse it." And I know you and Mike have a temperature problem in Texas also. So what temperature do you use? It can't be room temp because I bought some bags of ice when I was down there.lee said:Bruce,
I make up the 1040 ml RIGHT before I use it. I develop 4 4x5s and 2 5x7s or 1 8x10 then I throw it out. the chemsitry is too cheap to worry about trying to reuse it.
lee\c
Bruce (Camclicker) said:I'm entering my third week of not smoking after 50+ years of smoking 2 packs a day and find everyday simple tasks a bit challanging.
George Collier said:Don't know too much about Pyrocat, but I read the begining and end of thread - seems impossible for the same A and B mixing mistake to happen more than once, how about that maybe the A and the B are not what you think? 2:2:100 won't help if that is the case. Maybe you just need to remake the A and B?
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