Two-Bath Fixing
Used correctly, 2-bath fixing gives the same fixing capacity but guarantees complete fixing, which might fail if you over-use the fixer somewhat. Such an error won’t hurt the final result in 2-bath fixing, as Fix 2 finishes the job. Most fixers have a capacity of 25 rolls = 25 8” x 10” sheets = 100 4” x 5” sheets = 2000 square inches with standard films. For example, that’s the stated capacity of Kodak Professional Fixer. In my experience, two-bath fixing does a superior job of removing the magenta-colored dyes from Kodak B&W films compared to using a single bath, especially as the fixer accumulates use.
This is reduced to 2/3 or about 17 rolls = 67 4” x 5” sheets = 1333 square inches for Kodak T-Max films. Always check the fixer-maker’s data to be sure of its fixing capacity.
In use, you’d mix 2 liters of fresh fixer and store each in bottles labeled “Film Fix 1” and Film Fix 2”. Fix the film for one-half of the recommended fixing time in Fix 1. Then finish the fixing in Fix 2, returning each bath to its labeled bottle and recording the usage.
When you reach the stated capacity for one liter, discard the heavily-worked Fix 1, pour the contents of the lightly-worked Fix 2 bottle into the Fix 1 bottle (old Fix 2 is demoted to the new Fix 1), and mix a fresh liter of Fix 2. Repeat each time you reach the stated capacity for one liter of fixer. In this way, you get complete fixing and all of the fixing capacity for which you paid.
Although written for fixing paper, the same principle applies to film fixing as it does to fixing papers in the following excerpt from page 86 of
Amphoto Home Darkroom Course
Advanced Black and White
John S. Carrol
Copyright © 1977 by American Photographic Book Publishing Company
“Two-Bath Fixing
The thin, fine-grained emulsion of a print paper is fixed very rapidly; in a fresh hypo bath it takes no more than a minute or two for completed fixing. However, in a fixing bath that is approaching exhaustion, fixing will not be complete in any length of time.
The way it works is this: in dissolving out the unexposed silver halides, the fixing bath first converts them to complex silver-sodium-thiosulfate compounds. These are not soluble in water, but will dissolve in fresh hypo; in practice, their removal takes place at the same time as their formation in fresh fixing bath. However, when a certain concentration of these complexes exists in the fixing bath, the bath becomes saturated with them and will not dissolve any more of them from the paper emulsion. If the print is washed at this stage it will still contain large quantities of silver and thiosulfate salts, which are not soluble in water and are not removed by the washing. It is this retained silver salt which is responsible for eventual staining of prints kept for a long time.
However, if the print is not allowed to stay in the partly exhausted hypo bath for too long, the silver-sodium-thiosulfate complex is still soluble in fresh hypo; this is the basis of the two-bath system of fixing.
For this method, you need four trays—developer, stop bath, first fixing bath and second fixing bath (both trays contain F5 or similar fixers). The first bath removes most of the silver halides; the second bath will accumulate little silver and can easily dispose of what is left in the paper plus the difficult-to-dissolve complexes. The two baths are good for as many as two hundred 8” x 10” prints for a gallon of each; when that many prints have been fixed, discard the first bath, transfer the second bath to the first tray, and mix a new second bath. The combination is again good for 200 prints.”