How much heat did you use? Oxidized phenidone, IIRC, is red. It doesn't take a lot of oxidation to change the color of combinations of the chemicals in Pyrocat HD. Pyrocat HD without sulfite should dissolve in glycol quite easily at about the temperature of hot tap water.donbga said:I've just mixed my first batch of PyroCat-HD part A with propylene glycol and quite to my surprise the color of the mix was a red wine color.
Is this normal?
gainer said:How much heat did you use? Oxidized phenidone, IIRC, is red.
Tom and Pat,gainer said:How much heat did you use? Oxidized phenidone, IIRC, is red. It doesn't take a lot of oxidation to change the color of combinations of the chemicals in Pyrocat HD. Pyrocat HD without sulfite should dissolve in glycol quite easily at about the temperature of hot tap water.
Your best bet is a test.
You might try the use of a small amount of ascorbic acid in place of the bisulfite. It works quite well in Pyrocat MC. About 2 grams should do the job. You can probably get by without the use of triethanolamine, which in Pyrocat MC is mainly for the purpose of free basing the metol.
donbga said:I've just mixed my first batch of PyroCat-HD part A with propylene glycol and quite to my surprise the color of the mix was a red wine color.
Is this normal?
That is my usual approach. Of course, it helps to have the glycol warm enough to reduce its viscosity, but that's only about body temperature. This applies especially when TEA is the solvent. That stuff can freeze at about 70 F. It likes to supercool also.Gerald Koch said:You can also add the ingredients to cold solvent whether it be glycol or TEA and then warm it just enough to dissolve them.
Sandy, Tom, Gerald, Pat, and Ryuji,sanking said:Don,
When I first started mixing Pyrocat-HD in glycol I mixed at about 180-200F, and the solution turned red when I added the phenidone. However, it worked as expected so perhaps the coloration is due to food dye, as Pat Gainer has suggested in othre threads, and not to oxidation of the phenidone. In any event, I subsequently changed my working procedures to mix at 150F and now when I add the phenidone there is no change in color so my advice would be to just lower the mixing temperature.
Sandy
gainer said:I just tried ascorbic acid for the sodium bisulfite in pyrocat HD. I used about 1/3 as much by weight. This ploy was used in a slightly different way to make Pyrocat MC. I think you will like it. Not that it's any better than the real Pyrocat HD, but that ascorbic acid is easier to dissolve in glycol than sulfite or bisulfite.
I don't know how it works in either th metol or phenidone case, but I am guessing that the phenidone-ascorbic acid or the metol-ascorbic acid combination, which need no sulfite for activity, generate enough silver to catalyze catechol or hydroquinone. Actually, I tested with hydroquinone, but I am dead sure it will work with catechol. The stain color will be somewhat different.
There is no need for TEA in the stock as the ascorbic acid seems to have no more effect on pH than the bisulfite did.
Now I have another 500 ml of a stock I can only use 5 or 10 ml at a time.
gainer said:In one of the many other threads or two or three, the use of TEA and a little bit of water to free the base of metol was described in detail. I don't have the details at hand, but the object is to calculate by the molecular weights of metol, TEA and water how much TEA and water is required, make a thoroughly stirred slurry out of those components, heat it somewhat and then add ascorbic acid and glycol to make the required volume. Since we must neutralize a sulfuric acid molecule and form a TEA-metol analog of a sodium methylaminophenolate we need 4 molecular weights of TEA for each molecular weight of metol along with 2 molecular weights of water.
haryanto said:Pat,
what happen when TEA is not used in pyrocat MC with glycol
thanks
sanking said:OK, I am not Pat Gainer, but perhaps can answer your question.
The Pyrocat-M formula was water based. Pat devised a way to mix metol with glycol in the Pyrocat-M formula, making it possible to have a very long life formula with all of the qualities of the Pyrocat-M formula. This invovles mixing a small amount of TEA and water, making a slurry, and then adding it to propylene glycol.
There may be other ways to effect the mix of metol in glycol, but the method Pat devised is very simple, and works great.
The small amount of TEA used to free base the metol plays little or no role in the characteristics of the developer since the carbonate Stock B solution works at a much higher pH than TEA.
Sandy
haryanto said:I asked about TEA because from the result of my pyrocat MC, in tmax100 , EI 80, I've got very thin negative, i put my shadow in zone IV (i'm not test in densitometer because i dont have), it seem the shadow fall bellow zone IV, its about zone III, the highlight seems ok (the scene about zone IV and zone VIII)
Claire Senft said:What an interesting and nice discussion this has been.
Gee, I do not miss Jdef one little bit.
Michael Kadillak said:I completely agree. What a wonderful experience it is to be able to get back to intelligently discussing the substantive issues of a post without the typical distraction from Jdef we had to previously wade through. Sharing knowledge can be a pleasant activity and we all benefit from it. Pass it on....
Cheers!
haryanto said:Thanks Sandy,
I will test it with EI 50 or 25 to see the result next week,
Yes Michael, what a wonderful world, discussions without any distractions, and sharing knowledge, nice to know u all
sanking said:Something that must be kept in mind is that there will be some variation in results when working with formulas that we mix ourselves, and this is because there is little or no uniformity in our materials. We acquire things like metol, phenidoine, pyrocatechin and ascorbic acid from a wide variety of suppliers, and from experience we know that there can be differences in the way these materiasl work, ranging from small to fairly significant, depending on our supplier.
So we should not expect the same level of consistency with our home-mixed formulas as when opening a pack of Kodak D76 or Xtol, where all of the ingredients are very carefully controlled by supplier and method of mixing.
Sandy King
haryanto said:Thanks Sandy, that's make sense,
i bought cathecol from photoformulary, and the rest from local supplier
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