Its used for modifying the chlorine level from what I remember. I bought a quart sized container of it quite a few years back, price was nothing to worry over.How would one know if the sodium sulfite from pool shops is good for our purposes?? and secondly what do pool shops do with sodium sulfite?
These two look similar, but behave very differently in photographic bathes. Sodium Sulfite is an essential ingredient in many photographic bathes, whereas Glauber's salt is almost irrelevant.
Sulfite and thiosulfite are both used to reduce chlorine levels. Sodium sulfite also used in wine-making, food preservation, etc. Food grade is good enough for most darkroom formulas. I would not hesitate to use it for a substitute HCA but in a color developer I would use photograde, source it from the same place you got your CD-1.
It says right on the package it is over 99% sodium sulfite with a trace amount of sodium sulfate.
Food grade is the same as Photographic grade in most cases/
Does this alternative help? https://www.amazon.ca/EMS-21300-Sod...qid=1529802486&sr=1-1&keywords=sodium+sulfiteWhere in Canada would I be able to buy Food grade Sodium Sulfite?? any takers
My bad Ian, I, of course meant Sodium Thiosulfate (excuse the American spelling) used for all sorts of interesting things including de-chlorination.Not strictly true Sodium Sulphate is used in tropical developers to help reduce the emulsion swelling.
Never heard of Thiosulphite. I suspect you mean Metabisulphite or the less pure US version Bisulphite. JT Baker sell both - Bisulphite is usually around 95% Metabisulphite the rest Bisulphite although Kodak's could be a lower Metabisulphite content 90% springs to mind, it's largely differences in manufacture. Food grade is the same as Photographic grade in most cases/
Ian
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