A week ago, I responded to the Supermarket Fixer question posted here by saying that a traveler could, if not wanting to risk bringing undeveloped film through airport scanners, develop the film, thoroughly stop it and dry it, and bring it home to fix it. That would not be a perfect solution, of course, but I thought it would be possible. So, I tested it.
I exposed a strip of Plus-X motion picture film, every shot exactly the same. I cut the film before putting it on reels then developed it in Parodinal. After developing, I stopped the film with freshly mixed Kodak stop bath. Then, in the dark, I took one reel out and resealed the tank. I hung up the film I'd taken out by safelight and fixed and washed the remaining film. I hung up the fixed film to dry in my bathroom.
Once the unfixed film was dry, I cut it in half and put one half in a film canister. The other half I left hanging and turned on the light.
I left it alone for a week. One small strip of film was sealed in the dark canister, another was hanging two feet from a 60watt bulb, another was fixed and dried.
Today, I fixed the film and scanned it.
From left to right: normal, unfixed and stored in the dark, unfixed and stored in the light.
The scans are pretty similar. In the same order:
So, it seems like you can fix film, let it dry, put it away, and fix it a week later - if there's an emergency.
I exposed a strip of Plus-X motion picture film, every shot exactly the same. I cut the film before putting it on reels then developed it in Parodinal. After developing, I stopped the film with freshly mixed Kodak stop bath. Then, in the dark, I took one reel out and resealed the tank. I hung up the film I'd taken out by safelight and fixed and washed the remaining film. I hung up the fixed film to dry in my bathroom.
Once the unfixed film was dry, I cut it in half and put one half in a film canister. The other half I left hanging and turned on the light.
I left it alone for a week. One small strip of film was sealed in the dark canister, another was hanging two feet from a 60watt bulb, another was fixed and dried.
Today, I fixed the film and scanned it.
From left to right: normal, unfixed and stored in the dark, unfixed and stored in the light.
The scans are pretty similar. In the same order:



So, it seems like you can fix film, let it dry, put it away, and fix it a week later - if there's an emergency.