Steve Roberts
Member
I'll type up my process into a legible form and post it here, probably after the weekend as I don't have much in the way of email at home.
Best wishes,
Steve
Best wishes,
Steve
Hi,
As promised, here are the details of the process ...
Hypo stock solution 20g in 200cc water (equates to 10cc per gram hypo required)
Steve
just out of curiousity--has the brown stain boogeyman been identified yet or is it still a plague?
I had a brown stain problem, but it was cured by a change in diet.
You can possibly get a sample from some minilab near you, or you get one of these C41 or E6 kits. For this experiment it doesn't matter whether you use bleach or BLIX. If you let us know where "The end of the world" is, maybe some other APUG member nearby can give you a sample.I've had to put film processing on the back-burner for a while. I will need to try the C41 E6 bleach test but no idea how I can get a small enough amount for a test.
You can possibly get a sample from some minilab near you, or you get one of these C41 or E6 kits. For this experiment it doesn't matter whether you use bleach or BLIX. If you let us know where "The end of the world" is, maybe some other APUG member nearby can give you a sample.
You are correct, that's the pentahydrate Na2S2O3 * 5 H2OWhat I'm using is the old-fashioned, traditional Sodium thiosulphate. Whether it's anhydrous or not - you've got me there! It's the only type I've ever come across - transparent crystals, elongated with several sides and up to a quarter inch in length, about an eighth diameter. My guess is that it's not anhydrous.
What I'm using is the old-fashioned, traditional Sodium thiosulphate. Whether it's anhydrous or not - you've got me there! It's the only type I've ever come across - transparent crystals, elongated with several sides and up to a quarter inch in length, about an eighth diameter. My guess is that it's not anhydrous.
I agree that the amount of hypo is a key factor - too much gives no true blacks and blown highlights, though rating the film at a higher ASA can give usable though low contrast results. When you say that you're using a fraction of the hypo I am perhaps I'm not explaining myself well. I'm dissolving 20g of hypo in 200cc H2O, then using 10cc of this solution per gramme hypo required. At 4g/litre, for my 35mm tank, which requires 300cc of solution to cover one film, I'm using 12cc or effectively 1.2g hypo. How much do you use?
Isn't Dokumol a much stronger and much faster developer? That would explain why it needs more solvent for the same (or at least similar) effect.I was interested that Rodinal seemed to require approx. 1/4 the hypo needed with Dokumol when I tried it.
Isn't Dokumol a much stronger and much faster developer? That would explain why it needs more solvent for the same (or at least similar) effect.
The fact that you have got where you are after 10 films is admirable!
There will always be some undevelopable silver halide that needs to be cleaned up by the solvent.
The less time this solvent has for doing its job, the stronger it needs to be.
If the film area is sufficiently exposed ... and that's key: few scenes will give you that. The characteristic curve goes waaaaaaaaay up.In theory could a developer develop the silver halides to max dMax at first run through?
But how fast did they do most of their work? Is there significant difference between 3 minutes of Dokumol or 12 minutes?I see your point, but in my case the R09 was used for 10 minutes and Dokumol for 12 minutes and the R09 needed less hypo.
Most certainly, especially when it is as dilute as it is in reversal developers. Also note that for every Silver ion bound by Thiosulfate/Thiocyanate/whatever a free Halide ion enters the developer. In case of photographic film that means Bromide or Iodide, and both counteract fixer action and development.On a similar theme, will hypo reach an exhaustion point?
Also note that for every Silver ion bound by Thiosulfate/Thiocyanate/whatever a free Halide ion enters the developer. In case of photographic film that means Bromide or Iodide, and both counteract fixer action and development.
Not really, and this will eventually kill every fixer even if you somehow remove/recover the Silver. Note, that not only the solvent liberates halide ions: where do you think they go when you develop silver?Rudeofus - this is interesting. So - is there something to be done to quench or otherwise sequester those pesky free-halide ions? Or is it as simple as ensuring there is sufficient 'excess' developer to mitigate this?
There is a good chance that the Permanganate destroys fabric or dyes when it gets reduced to brown MnO2, which means you can remove the brown stain but still end up with stained clothes. This simple device, on the other side, should take care of all stainsyou can eliminate the permanganate stain if you dip your clothes in a metabisulfite solution, much like you do with the clearing bath.
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