I'm trying to see if I can make a staining developer work with replenishment in a motion picture machine.
I'm thinking:
Grams per liter of working solution:
.1 Metol
.5 Catechol
1.0 Sodium Sulfite
.05 Ascorbic acid
7.5 Potassium Carbonate
Any reactions as to what to expect?
Hi, I don't know hardly anything about staining developers, but I CAN tell you that this "working tank" formula won't work in a replenished system. In a real system, the film will release byproducts which generally affect development. The most significant is probably bromide. So at a bare minimum your tank solution should start out with some amount of something like KBr. Then when you design the replenisher you use the incoming volume, the replenishment rate, to dilute the working tank enough to keep the bromide at a more or less constant concentration.
In order to test this in a real system you need to get at least a handful of tank turnovers to approach the final equilibrium. A tank turnover means that you add roughly one tank volume of replenisher. The general idea is that adding one tank's worth of replenisher actually flushes out only about half of the original solution. So one tank gets you about halfway to the final equilibrium, two tanks about three-quarters, etc. During this seasoning you will also need to be processing actual film with the same approximate exposure as your intended MP film.
You could rig up a small scale test system to mimic a cine processor but the rate of oxidation and evaporation would be higher; adjustments to the replenisher formula would likely be needed.
I'm just trying to point out the difficulties of something that looks fairly easy on the surface.
I think, during formula development, at the very least you would need: some sort of consistent method of exposing test strips (a sensitometer, for example), a way to measure the results (densitometer), and some chemical testing gear. I think, at minimum, perhaps a good pH meter and perhaps a hydrometer. It might be useful to have an analytic procedure for at least sulfite (the Kodak H-24 manual used to be online - it has a basic procedure, I think). The processing lab you use may already have these capabilities, and if so it's probably better to rely on their expertise than trying to learn it yourself.