dancqu
Member
Dan,
"I feel that you are trying to convince me something but
without addressing the concerns I described above."
The ONE concern is the end product however it's arrival.
Ilford proved that years ago with it's Archival Processing
Sequence. At start they claimed a mix of 40 8x10s could
be pushed through a liter of 1:3 rapid fix; their one minute
film strength for paper fix. The very short fix + the 5-10-5
wash, hca, wash, comprised the sequence. Although the
one fix loads to Ilford commercial processing levels,
2 grams/liter, the 5-10-5 follow up turns out a
product which meets ANSI archival levels.
So the end product meets archival standards but the
processing does not come close. That procedure BTW
no longer exits as an archival sequence. Long LE is now
tied to a 0.5 gram/liter maximum silver level. For what
that says. I think the 'sequence' for archival results
ran into some in the field difficulties.
"Existing published data show rapid decline of fixing rate
below about 0.8M of thiosulfate..."
My estimate is an eight fold increase in time in the fixer;
four minutes with sodium thiosulfate 1% concentration.
That four minutes though is still less than that for
a two-bath fixer.
"Dilution by carryover fluid ..."
Who needs it? One more concern I do without and do so
by using the fix once then down the drain with it. Dan