Berri
Member
What diluition shall I use to mix a stop bath fo C41 processing? I have a 6% white vinegar and I use 500mL of solution. Is 2% enough? Or shall I use it straight?
I think you may be right on cost when you look at the cost of Kodak concentrated stop bath and its dilution level compared to the cost of white vinegar at 1+4. I'd certainly want to be sure that vinegar for food doesn't contain anything that is best left out of a photographic stop bath.Does a vinegar stop bath not pong a little? And it can't be much cheaper than standard bought stop baths ie acetic and citric acid based ones?
The OP is seeking advice about colour film processing, not B&W.If you use one of the "Archival" fixers from Photographers' Formulary , just a quick rinse in water will do. No stop bath necessary. (for film) I stopped darkroom printing a while ago, but I used Kodak's Indicator Stop bath back then. Cheap and turns purple when it's depleted.
Cheers
You can't make pickles with the nasty kodak stuff!The Kodak concentrated stop is £8.60 on one U.K. retailer for just under half a litre and at 1:63 makes roughly 30 litre. White vinegar cost 1 euro per litre so 30 euros which is about £28( over 3 times the price) for the equivalent amount of stop
The Kodak concentrate is much cheaper and I suspect that in the U.K. white vinegar may be more expensive that the equivalent of 1 euro per litre. A half litre bottle of Kodak stop take up much less room as well
pentaxuser
Oops!The OP is seeking advice about colour film processing, not B&W.
One wonders if there is any acetic acid in thereThe ingredients say alcool water and glucose
I looked on the red wine vinegar bottle and the ingredients say red wine, sulphiteOne wonders if there is any acetic acid in there.
I looked at the bottle of "Heinz" distilled white vinegar we have in the kitchen. The "ingredients" list doesn't list any - it just says how it is made and describes the acidity.
I'd be concerned about the glucose, but it may be that glucose doesn't matter.
Thanks PE.White vinegar is the distilled product of fermentation to give regular vinegar from apples, grapes or any fruit. It is white and the undistilled product is brownish. The latter is not usable in photo processing as the contaminants may cause stain. The white vinegar may contain some additives, such as glucose but this causes no problems.
The usual stop bath is 1 - 2% acetic acid and so diluting white vinegar to the proper concentration will work.
PE
I have just read your earlier post and need to apologise for my miscalculation. I failed to take into account that your white vinegar can also be diluted at at least 1+3 which is 4 litres of stop per euro so you pay about 8 euros for 32 litres and the Kodak stop is about 32 litres at a dilution of 1:63. So the prices of the two are very close and the white vinegar is slightly cheaper.You can't make pickles with the nasty kodak stuff!
I know it's cheaper but I have this in the house ready available!
Any fermentation product, taken to completion yields acetic acid! So yes, fruits, berries, grain and most anything with sugars in them. Do not use Citric Acid stops though with color products. There are, I am told, catastrophic side effects.
Now, why use a stop with color? Well, if you get nonuniform results is the main reason. As far as process temperature, I would not deviate from the 100F recommendation under any circumstances. I have seen what happens if you do.
PE
I did read the label as I said in my previus post! It is 6% and contains glucose. it is the cheapest and the only brand I find at my local supermarket! I buy it because I sometimes use it in the kitchenI use the cheapest white vinegar I can find. This is just acetic acid and water. Be sure to read the label as food grade can be anywhere from 4 to 6%. Japanese vinegar is usually 4% and contains some sugar, ie glucose, to cut the acidic flavor. Great for making poulet au saute vinaigre.![]()
no alcool is made without fermentation, it would cost much more. Yeasts "eat" sugar and produce C02 and alcool (ethanol). Alcool could be oxidayzed even more by the action of some bacteria (acetobacter) to acetaldheyde and then to acetic acid and water. bacteria can produce acetic acid even straight from malt, fruit and other stuff containing sugar. I dubt that such a product could be sold in a supermarked as food productPE, somewhere deep in my memory, I read or someone told me that industrial white vinegar could be made as a by-product of the petroleum refining industry and they somehow by-passed the fermentation step in making it. Have you ever heard of this?.......Regards?
2% IS OK BUT i prefer citric acid these days.What diluition shall I use to mix a stop bath fo C41 processing? I have a 6% white vinegar and I use 500mL of solution. Is 2% enough? Or shall I use it straight?
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