Has anyone mentioned that when using stand or semi-stand development a water pre-soak of a few minutes is good practice? This will eliminate or minimize the possibility of air bubbles. When the emulsion is first wetted there is a fair amount of out-gassing and it is better to have this take place in the pre-bath than in the developer.
Sandy King
OK, my curiousity is aroused.
Accepting that out gassing creates the potential for air bells,
(and why not ?) I wonder what are the factors which contribute to detectable bells ?
Because I DON'T get them !
1. Outgassing creates the potential for bells.
2. In 40 years of active professional photography,
and thousands of images, I've never detected the presence of airbells.
3. I print full frame plus black border, so they would be pretty evident.
4. NO PreSoak (why I don't presoak is not germain)
5. Steel 35mm & 120 reels (kindermann, nikor, hewes)
6. Sheets in trays, 7.6 liter tanks on hangars, Combi tanks.
7. 'Minimal agitation' for 40 years, in Rodinal, metol/carbonate, ABC pyro, PyroCat.
8. Conventional agitation patterns in every developer anybody else has ever used.
9. Distilled water, tap water, though out the USA, Canada, and Europe.
I've NEVER used PhotoFlo in the Developer,
I'm clean but not obsessive.
Maybe it is like lightning strikes and meteorites,
I just haven't been hit YET.
But there OUGHT to be something ELSE.
WHAT AM I DOING WRONG ????
(Please be polite and assume that
either me or my clients would have noticed airbells
or other negative defects)
I HAVE THE SOLUTION!
What I did was I put my reels in the sink.
Let them stay for 1 hour. Clean them with a brush.
Put in 1 chloride tablet for the bath tub.
Let it stay for 1 hour.
Refresh the water, and let it stay over night.
Next day i cleaned them again with a nailbrush and dried them.
So this is the solution for me.
Thanks all you analogists for the help.
I HAVE THE SOLUTION!

Dumb question... what's a chloride tablet? Who sells them?
...And I'm skeptical that this is truly the solution to this problem. Let us know in a year if it consistently works.
I went back to basics, cleaned the reels, 5x4 (Jobo) and 35mm/120 Paterson as Leon recommenced. Then processed 3 120 films it made zero difference.
Leon's wrong the bleach removes gelatin and other build up on the spirals not wetting agent. Did cleaning make any difference - no - not at all.
Despite running the old reels through the dishwasher and boiling them to try and get them clean, I couldnt get rid of the problem, so I cut my losses and bought a whole new set of reels and from then on, I removed the film from the reels before the final wetting agent rinse and I've never had the same problem again
Sorry Leon, I wasn't criticising you, it was others who mentioned the residue left on film spirals, I've always cleaned all mine with bleach every 6 months or so for many years now.
Water quality varies and it's probably only a few of us who have a water supply that causes these problems.
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