grainyvision
Subscriber
So I'm still trying to optimize my process and one of the maybe better ideas I had was to put the emulsion after precipitation into a closed black plastic bottle and to dunk that into a sous vide (my hot plate is VERY difficult to maintain a perfect temperature with, but sous vide works with practically no effort). My plan would basically be to ripen in the closed bottle in the sous vide (with a floating bowl to prevent the bottle from moving too much), and then in theory I can use room lights etc until ripening is complete. When it is complete, then I'd go back to safe lights, filter the emulsion (unwashed paper emulsion) into a beaker, add finals, stir while sitting in a cold water bath to get to coating temp, and then finally divide the emulsion into black film canisters, each canister being enough for coating one sheet of paper, then to put these film canisters of emulsion back into the sous vide (which has now been adjusted for coating temp). The advantages are numerous. Less safelight exposure being the biggest practical one. I can in theory even switch to room lights safely during coating if needed as long as my already coated paper is protected... And I can do other things while waiting for the long ripening times.
My biggest concern is that this could affect evaporation (should I use slightly less water?) and if there is any off gassing, then this wouldn't be as efficient (such as off gassing of ammonia or chlorine etc). Otherwise though it sounds like a solid plan that makes temperature control extremely simple and consistent and also removes humidity of the darkroom from the equation to a certain extent (I live in Colorado, so even with water baths etc going, still rare to get above 50% humidity in my darkroom)
Does this seem reasonable or would the prevention of off-gassing make this non-ideal?
My biggest concern is that this could affect evaporation (should I use slightly less water?) and if there is any off gassing, then this wouldn't be as efficient (such as off gassing of ammonia or chlorine etc). Otherwise though it sounds like a solid plan that makes temperature control extremely simple and consistent and also removes humidity of the darkroom from the equation to a certain extent (I live in Colorado, so even with water baths etc going, still rare to get above 50% humidity in my darkroom)
Does this seem reasonable or would the prevention of off-gassing make this non-ideal?
