Originally posted by Denis P.
...
b) you make Rodinal 1:100, providing enough "soup" to be sure the developing agent won't exhaust as in a) above, but then you are probably pouring too much liquid into the drum, and are running the risk of damaging the processor! (Remember that JOBO always states the MIN and MAX quantities of chemicals to be used in each particular drum!). JOBO processors have plastic gears, and the lift (particulalry the handle) are relatively fragile, so if you pour in too much liquid in the drum, you're simply asking for trouble! The drum is simply too heavy for tha processor...
and ...
... Scroll down to heading "Never use a tank or drum loading that exceeds the processor's specifications". There's a link to bottom of the page, more specifically:
http://www.jobo.com/jobo_service/us...s_misc_tank_and_drum_capacities.htm#Footnotes
I'm not trying to split hairs here, just trying to explain why JOBO might have warned against too dilute chemistry in drums - like I said, you're facing either developer (or fixer, or whatever) exhaustion, or you're nearing the upper limit of the quantity recommended for a particular drum/tank.
Ah... it is often good to get to the source of the confusion..
In the first quote, you had specified
"DRUM" capacities (emphases above are mine). JOBO states
PROCESSOR capacities -
irrespective of drum types/ configurations. I had NEVER seen information limiting the maximum capacities of the individual
DRUMS ... so began the discussion.
Be that as it may, I've been considering the "load" involved: rotating (and reversing rotation) inertia. This could getcomplicated, considering that the liquid in the tank would probably continue in its rotational movement for some time, only reversing when the friction (liquid) with the tank exceeded equilibrium...
Shades of a Mechanical Engineering exercise!! --- and dim, distant, memories...
Are you there, Ole? Want to tackle this one?