Developers are an unstable mixture. As soon as the powder is exposed to the air and humidity iy begins to decompose. Transferring the contents to jars helps but even so the damage in the form of moisture has already begun.
This week I tried to see how little water I could use to dissolve D-76, on the theory that a more highly concentrated working solution would last longer in storage. It didn't work at all and I ended up just mixing a full gallon. I then split the results into 4 1-qt datatainer bottles, filled near the top, and squeezed just a bit to set up a negative pressure in the bottle. 1-qt size fits my processing habits nicely. Per helpful suggestions in another thread, the bottles are on the shelf in the basement, which stays in the 70'sF in the summer.
The problem with doing this that you will be near the solubility limit. If the temperature drops components will start to crystallize out. The crystals can be very hard to redissolve in particular the metol
The solution to all this is to only buy enough to fit your usage. Why is this so difficult.
So would you agree with my method to devide powder developer I descibed before ? I ask my wife - she has worked as a pharmacist for many years.A noobie post!
I have in the past divided Lith powder developers (Part A&B) with never a problem.
As a retired pharmacist I cannot see a problem with dividing powders if the powder has been mixed or stirred to become as close to homogeneous as possible (ie. acceptable tolerance).
In my profession I have packed headache powders in paper wrappers from bulk powder mix (many years ago!). All tablets are pressed from a small sample of a large powder mix. All the same principles apply to dividing up 'dry' photo chemicals. Deterioration from oxidation, humidity, etc, are other problems to consider if the original pack has to be opened.

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.Developers are an unstable mixture. As soon as the powder is exposed to the air and humidity iy begins to decompose. Transferring the contents to jars helps but even so the damage in the form of moisture has already begun.
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