I have a question about which of the Pyros (HD or MC) in glycol is more stable over the long term.
I purchased the 500ml kit of Pyrocat MC in glycol from PF with a manufacture date of 105 (October 2006) and used the developer infrequently up to now. Negs looked great. I developed about five rolls during that time and carefully poured each of the solutions into a graduate making sure the lip of the container did not touch the graduate, preventing contamination. Total volume consumed was about 50ml so the air space in the container was minimal and the containers were tightly sealed after each use.
Last weekend I did a roll and and the negs/leader looked suspiciously thin. Knowing I had proper exposure and got poor results, I quickly shot another carefully exposed roll and developed again. The image was all but invisible, only the slightest hint of an image was present and the leader was about Zone V density (I often use the leader density to judge efficacy of a developer). The developer had died in a period of a couple of hours or so!
The color of the raw solution A developer was virtually a coffee brown with a purplish tinge and when diluted with 500ml of distilled water was a moderate to deep purple color.
I called PF and they said the expected longevity of the developer in glycol was easily 4-5 years and that a light coffee color was normal. Mine was more the color of regular coffee.
Since the developer contains ascorbic acid, IIRC, is it subject to sudden death failure as was Xtol?
I ordered another kit (125ml this time) with a manufacture date of 112 (don't know how to translate the code) and the solution A was a much paler color. Also, I noticed on the PF website that this is supposedly a 'new version.' I have not tried the new developer yet.
Anybody know if there were problems early on with MC or what the changes were to create a 'new version?'
Any help would be greatly appreciated,
Fred
I purchased the 500ml kit of Pyrocat MC in glycol from PF with a manufacture date of 105 (October 2006) and used the developer infrequently up to now. Negs looked great. I developed about five rolls during that time and carefully poured each of the solutions into a graduate making sure the lip of the container did not touch the graduate, preventing contamination. Total volume consumed was about 50ml so the air space in the container was minimal and the containers were tightly sealed after each use.
Last weekend I did a roll and and the negs/leader looked suspiciously thin. Knowing I had proper exposure and got poor results, I quickly shot another carefully exposed roll and developed again. The image was all but invisible, only the slightest hint of an image was present and the leader was about Zone V density (I often use the leader density to judge efficacy of a developer). The developer had died in a period of a couple of hours or so!
The color of the raw solution A developer was virtually a coffee brown with a purplish tinge and when diluted with 500ml of distilled water was a moderate to deep purple color.
I called PF and they said the expected longevity of the developer in glycol was easily 4-5 years and that a light coffee color was normal. Mine was more the color of regular coffee.
Since the developer contains ascorbic acid, IIRC, is it subject to sudden death failure as was Xtol?
I ordered another kit (125ml this time) with a manufacture date of 112 (don't know how to translate the code) and the solution A was a much paler color. Also, I noticed on the PF website that this is supposedly a 'new version.' I have not tried the new developer yet.
Anybody know if there were problems early on with MC or what the changes were to create a 'new version?'
Any help would be greatly appreciated,
Fred
