dancqu said:
That's easy to believe. I do feel safe buying from
Photographer's Formulary. They are many years in the
business of being a specialty supplier to darkroom workers.
They have the anhydrous and the penta thiosulfates.
Pay for three pounds of the penta or two pounds of the
anhydrous. With the penta a pound of water is
included at no extra charge.
Actually, the "no extra charge" water actually costs a
negative amount. Because PF doesn't sell 2 and 3 pound quantities, I can't compare those; but for 10-pound quantities the costs are $55.50 for anhydrous vs. $29.95 for pentahydrate (crystalline). That's $5.50/pound for anhydrous vs. $3.00/pound for pentahydrate; or adjusting for the "no extra charge" water, the 10 pounds of pentahydrate is equivalent to just 6.4 pounds of anhydrous, so the cost is $4.68/pound equivalent -- $0.82/pound less for the pentahydrate form. That doesn't consider shipping costs, though, which will eat into the cost advantage for the pentahydrate. I've also not checked the equivalences for most other sizes.
FWIW, although the Chemistry Store Web page is unclear at best about the form of their sodium thiosulfate, their cost is $17.70 for a 10-pound pail of the pentahydrate form, or $2.77/pound for anhydrous-equivalent. Again, this doesn't consider shipping.
Also FWIW, by my calculations, typical sodium thiosulfate fixers cost about $2.50-$3.50 per liter using Chemistry Store chemicals, including shipping. This contrasts to about $2.00-$3.00 per liter for similar commercial fixers (again, including shipping), so mixing your own sodium thiosulfate fixer doesn't make financial sense unless you can find sodium thiosulfate for much less than even the Chemistry Store price.