Rodinal version with best shelf life

For V.

D
For V.

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
Mt Rundle

A
Mt Rundle

  • 3
  • 0
  • 36
Sonatas XII-35 (Homes)

A
Sonatas XII-35 (Homes)

  • 0
  • 1
  • 32
Ode to Cor

H
Ode to Cor

  • 2
  • 0
  • 72
Moon in Myrtle

D
Moon in Myrtle

  • 5
  • 0
  • 65

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
199,454
Messages
2,791,856
Members
99,912
Latest member
ArcherKeating
Recent bookmarks
1

dcy

Subscriber
Joined
May 9, 2025
Messages
658
Location
New Mexico, USA
Format
35mm
Last year I found a bottle of ORWO R09 (the East German equivalent) from the 80s among my dad's old photo things. It sat in the attic for over 30 years, under an uninsulated roof which means it got cold in the winter and hot in the summer which I'd expect would be more likely to kill it than just the passage of time. But it works perfectly fine. It's very dark but doesn't even have any crystals or sediment on the bottom. Indestructible stuff.

View attachment 404176

I am convinced that there are only three things that will survive the nuclear apocalypse: cockroaches, 1960s refrigerators, and Rodinal.
 

baachitraka

Member
Joined
Apr 6, 2011
Messages
3,571
Location
Bremen, Germany.
Format
Multi Format
They have a long shelf life, so I will be developing using the last bottle that was opened 7 years ago.
 
OP
OP
Pseudodionizy

Pseudodionizy

Member
Joined
Jun 27, 2024
Messages
15
Location
Poland
Format
35mm
Thank you all again for your replies, I appreciate them a lot! I also wanted to ask, do you have any ideas what kind of creative things I could do with that exhausted/semi-exhausted Rodinal? It would be a shame to just get rid of it, perhaps there's something experimental I could use it for? I know I could try to develop prints in it, but currently I don't make prints.
 

dcy

Subscriber
Joined
May 9, 2025
Messages
658
Location
New Mexico, USA
Format
35mm
Thank you all again for your replies, I appreciate them a lot! I also wanted to ask, do you have any ideas what kind of creative things I could do with that exhausted/semi-exhausted Rodinal? It would be a shame to just get rid of it, perhaps there's something experimental I could use it for? I know I could try to develop prints in it, but currently I don't make prints.

My own experience with exhausted developers is that they are a world of frustration and pain. In my case it was an exhausted paper developer. I don't know to what extent my experience applies to film, but here it is:

I kept getting horrible muddy prints. As I've moved to better, commercial and fresh developers, my time in the darkroom has only gotten easier. A bad developer will just not develop properly, meaning that the shadows won't get as dark as they're supposed to. If you try to compensate by developing longer, you just make the highlights darker without making the shadows darker and the whole thing becomes muddy. Nothing really creative about that. Your time and energy is worth more than the $14 it takes to buy a new bottle of Adox Rodinal.
 

thinkbrown

Member
Joined
Mar 7, 2025
Messages
127
Location
Boston MA
Format
Analog
Fwiw, I recently purchased a sealed glass bottle of rodinal on eBay with a date from 1976 written on the box. Works exactly like my modern bottle of R09.

Rodinal is vulnerable to oxidation if stored in partially empty bottles, but sealed the shelf life seems to be indefinite
 

Model71

Subscriber
Joined
Jun 14, 2025
Messages
36
Location
North Carolina
Format
Multi Format
Is there a method for testing chemicals for validity prior to using the chemicals? The idea of loosing film roll(s) during development due to "stale" chemicals sounds like russian roulette to me. Am I missing something obvious?
 

dcy

Subscriber
Joined
May 9, 2025
Messages
658
Location
New Mexico, USA
Format
35mm
Is there a method for testing chemicals for validity prior to using the chemicals? The idea of loosing film roll(s) during development due to "stale" chemicals sounds like russian roulette to me. Am I missing something obvious?

You can test whether or not the developer is completely dead by grabbing a piece of film leader (so it's been fully exposed to room light), developing it, and then fixing it. If the developer worked, the fixer should not clear the image.

But this test will not tell you if the developer is partially dead. For that, the only test that I can think of is to designate a sacrificial roll of film and develop it properly: Grab a roll of film, put it in your camera, and spend all 36 shots on the exact same test scene. Then store that somewhere safe. When you want to test a developer, go to a dark room or use a dark bag, grab about 2 inches of film, put it in your Patterson or Jobo tank, and develop it normally. If the developer is still good, you will see your test scene. For extra points, develop the scene when you first open the developer and save it so you have a stable point of comparison.

EDIT:

For what it's worth, I don't do any of this myself. I have three film developers: Two that have long shelf lives (PC-TEA and Rodinal) and one that I make myself in small batches that I know I will use quickly (D-23).

I believe most developers will "warn" you when they're going bad because the Dmax decreases gradually. But that's not true for all developers. XTOL is infamous for its "sudden death syndrome".
 
Last edited:

MattKing

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Apr 24, 2005
Messages
53,411
Location
Delta, BC Canada
Format
Medium Format
Many of us who do their own developing also use bulk film, so short, test rolls are available and perfect for the task.
 

Helinophoto

Member
Joined
Aug 19, 2011
Messages
1,091
Location
Norway
Format
Multi Format
Was just about to open a thread on this myself.
Adox Adonal died on me (sudden death), some crystallization and color of the concentrate was like dark tea, not more than a couple of years old.
(I had split the original bottle when I got it, into smaller brown glass bottles to keep the oxygen away from most of it as long as I could).

There are several reports online about Adox Adonal suddenly not working anymore, creating blank (completely blank) negatives.

No idea if it was an issue with the batches, or if it really does die, once residue starts to form on the bottom of the bottle.
I have used some kind of r09 (Agfa/Adox??) in the past, that bottle lasted for more than 7 years, black as coffee and was full of residue in the bottom of the bottle and it still worked fine.

I think they have done something to the formula for Adox Adonal, perhaps people use their stuff so quickly it has no time to die?

I got a new bottle now, and I am keeping the liquid in the original bottle, squeezing out as much air as possible between use, still has a light reddish hue and it still works just fine.
Time will tell how long it actually lasts, but be aware.
If you are a very low volume shooter (yes, we exist, what shall we do? Buy a pouch of D76 every time we need to develop something?)
If you switch between HC110 and Rodinal, so that you really use very little over a long period, there are confirmed reports of the Adox Adonal developer dying quickly once it goes black with residue.
 

Helinophoto

Member
Joined
Aug 19, 2011
Messages
1,091
Location
Norway
Format
Multi Format
You can test whether or not the developer is completely dead by grabbing a piece of film leader (so it's been fully exposed to room light), developing it, and then fixing it. If the developer worked, the fixer should not clear the image.

But this test will not tell you if the developer is partially dead. For that, the only test that I can think of is to designate a sacrificial roll of film and develop it properly: Grab a roll of film, put it in your camera, and spend all 36 shots on the exact same test scene. Then store that somewhere safe. When you want to test a developer, go to a dark room or use a dark bag, grab about 2 inches of film, put it in your Patterson or Jobo tank, and develop it normally. If the developer is still good, you will see your test scene. For extra points, develop the scene when you first open the developer and save it so you have a stable point of comparison.

EDIT:

For what it's worth, I don't do any of this myself. I have three film developers: Two that have long shelf lives (PC-TEA and Rodinal) and one that I make myself in small batches that I know I will use quickly (D-23).

I believe most developers will "warn" you when they're going bad because the Dmax decreases gradually. But that's not true for all developers. XTOL is infamous for its "sudden death syndrome".

Isn't the ease of a clip test to produce the purest black you can produce?
Anything which is semi opaque indicates developer exhaustion.

A fully exposed film-leader, should go completely black when developed.
If we are dealing with concentrate vs working solution, the clip test should be done with the working solution, for as long as the film requires, to reflect real life situation.

At least that is how I learned it back in the day.
 
Joined
Jan 28, 2023
Messages
1,280
Location
Wilammette Valley, Oregon
Format
35mm RF
Was just about to open a thread on this myself.
Adox Adonal died on me (sudden death), some crystallization and color of the concentrate was like dark tea, not more than a couple of years old.
I used to use Adonal and R09 years ago, and found both of these "flavors" did not last more than about 18 months once the bottle was opened, so I stopped buying them.
I currently use Adox Rodinal and the bottles I have are 3 years old now, half full and still working as well as when new. It seems the Adox Rodinal version is far more stable, based on my limited experience.
 

brbo

Member
Joined
Dec 28, 2011
Messages
2,171
Location
EU
Format
Multi Format
I opened my Adox Rodinal 500ml bottle in 2021 and developed film a few weeks ago. I keep it in the original bottle. It's now only half empty and has some crystals but works about as good as when I first used it.

The R09 that I had before did die after a couple of years. I thought that the Adox version was supposed to be better in that regard, but I'm obviously pushing my luck...
 

lungovw

Member
Joined
Jun 4, 2007
Messages
13
Location
Sao Paulo - Brazil
Format
Multi Format
My developers are all home made, including the Parodinal that is similar to Rodinal. With all of them I fraction the batch in small 5ml glasses, fully loaded, and in this way they are open just once. The same procedure can be done with purchased developers, just fraction it as soon as you have it and the shelf life of mini glass bottle will be the longest you can get. I made a video and more detailed written description about the procedure: Video, Page
 

Helinophoto

Member
Joined
Aug 19, 2011
Messages
1,091
Location
Norway
Format
Multi Format
I used to use Adonal and R09 years ago, and found both of these "flavors" did not last more than about 18 months once the bottle was opened, so I stopped buying them.
I currently use Adox Rodinal and the bottles I have are 3 years old now, half full and still working as well as when new. It seems the Adox Rodinal version is far more stable, based on my limited experience.

I think Adox Adonal and Adox Rodinal is the same product (just named differently for different markets). At least I cannot find anything else than Adox Adonal in fotoimpex these days.


Or wait, they have both???? Still, they say Adox Adonal (Rodinal) on the Adonal bottle.
Adonal:

Rodinal (they say it has been replaced, but it is still in stock?)

Why can’t they just make one juice, the good one, the one that just keeps kicking butt??

What’s next? Adox Adonal R09 (Rodinal)???

This is worse than all the bullshit related to the death of Bruce Lee 😖😝😝😝
 
Last edited:
Joined
Jan 28, 2023
Messages
1,280
Location
Wilammette Valley, Oregon
Format
35mm RF
I think Adox Adonal and Adox Rodinal is the same product (just named differently for different markets). At least I cannot find anything else than Adox Adonal in fotoimpex these days.

I did some research and it appears you may be right.
It's been years since I bought R09, and now that I think about it, what I bought was likely under the branding of Rollei/Compard R09 One Shot. That stuff did NOT last.
 

brbo

Member
Joined
Dec 28, 2011
Messages
2,171
Location
EU
Format
Multi Format
Adox Adonal is the same stuff as Adox Rodinal. R09 is not.
 

dcy

Subscriber
Joined
May 9, 2025
Messages
658
Location
New Mexico, USA
Format
35mm
Isn't the ease of a clip test to produce the purest black you can produce?
Anything which is semi opaque indicates developer exhaustion.

A fully exposed film-leader, should go completely black when developed.
If we are dealing with concentrate vs working solution, the clip test should be done with the working solution, for as long as the film requires, to reflect real life situation.

At least that is how I learned it back in the day.

I hadn't thought of that. It makes sense.
 
  • dcy
  • dcy
  • Deleted
  • Reason: Other people already said that Adonal = Rodinal.

Sidd

Subscriber
Joined
Oct 18, 2023
Messages
116
Location
Kolkata
Format
35mm
Last year I found a bottle of ORWO R09 (the East German equivalent) from the 80s among my dad's old photo things. It sat in the attic for over 30 years, under an uninsulated roof which means it got cold in the winter and hot in the summer which I'd expect would be more likely to kill it than just the passage of time. But it works perfectly fine. It's very dark but doesn't even have any crystals or sediment on the bottom. Indestructible stuff.

View attachment 404176

These are mythology!
 

miha

Member
Joined
Feb 15, 2007
Messages
2,997
Location
Slovenia
Format
Multi Format
Still, a reality for some.
 

Rayt

Member
Joined
Jul 25, 2010
Messages
301
Location
Santa Rosa, CA
Format
Multi Format
I have used the last drops of Adox Rodinal stored in it’s original plastic bottle after filtering the chunks of crystals with no issues.
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom