seadrive said:Other than the smell, what's so terrible about using an acetic acid stop bath?
Ole said:The smell isn't enough for you?
Acetic acid drops the pH lower than it should be, increasing the risk of damaging the emulsion due to differential contraction (leading to reticulation). Acetic acid without additives is also poorly buffered: It stops working suddenly.
Here's what it says on the bottle of "Sprint BLOCK Stop Bath (buffered, vanilla-scented, with indicator)", the stuff I use:Ole said:Acetic acid drops the pH lower than it should be, increasing the risk of damaging the emulsion due to differential contraction (leading to reticulation). Acetic acid without additives is also poorly buffered: It stops working suddenly.
Ole said:The only time I use an acid stop is when lith printing.
In that one case it is important to stop development
immediately at the right point, and nothing
does that as well as an acid stop.
Bob Carnie said:I print a lot of lith prints, and as Ole suggests
I require an immediate stop of development .
Bob Carnie said:I have found that without the acid the lith
print will indeed travel more than I would like.
Bob Carnie said:Why the all alkaline stages? with no acid stop
are you using the hypoclear step?
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