eumenius
Member
Hello friends,
I just want to share my idea how to keep the Pyrocat-HD first solution for long without a serious deterioration by air oxygen. I've got some plastic single-use injection syringes (5 ml for my 500 ml tank, and 20 ml for Combiplan-T), and filled each syringe with a precise dose of pyrocatechin-containing solution needed for one tank volume of working developer - almost without air bubbles, capping each syringe with its shielded needle. I am quite sure that it would keep really long this way - in the dark, and maybe in a fridge. Mixing it is also very easy now - you just press the piston, and the pre-measured volume goes in your mixing beaker. The syringes are of course recyclable, and both versions (fully plastic and with silicone rubber piston) are equally good - the rubber does not deteriorate from contact with pyro solution.
Is it better that making an inert atmosphere in a bottle every time? On my opinion, yes - and much more hygienic
Cheers from Moscow,
Zhenya
I just want to share my idea how to keep the Pyrocat-HD first solution for long without a serious deterioration by air oxygen. I've got some plastic single-use injection syringes (5 ml for my 500 ml tank, and 20 ml for Combiplan-T), and filled each syringe with a precise dose of pyrocatechin-containing solution needed for one tank volume of working developer - almost without air bubbles, capping each syringe with its shielded needle. I am quite sure that it would keep really long this way - in the dark, and maybe in a fridge. Mixing it is also very easy now - you just press the piston, and the pre-measured volume goes in your mixing beaker. The syringes are of course recyclable, and both versions (fully plastic and with silicone rubber piston) are equally good - the rubber does not deteriorate from contact with pyro solution.
Is it better that making an inert atmosphere in a bottle every time? On my opinion, yes - and much more hygienic

Cheers from Moscow,
Zhenya