• Welcome to Photrio!
    Registration is fast and free. Join today to unlock search, see fewer ads, and access all forum features.
    Click here to sign up

Will this work for darkroom sink?

Tree with Big Shadows

Tree with Big Shadows

  • 2
  • 0
  • 58
Everal Barn

A
Everal Barn

  • 2
  • 1
  • 60

Forum statistics

Threads
203,455
Messages
2,855,000
Members
101,851
Latest member
Si_Voltage
Recent bookmarks
0
I'd suggest you first look at local Craigslist items and see if you can find something...often, you'll find
commercial sinks from restaurants etc...I've built a few darkrooms with such. I always think stainless
is the way to go.
 
There are some surprisingly large ABS deep flat-bottomed mortar or cement-mixing trays (tubs) available these days, quite cheap. Might be entirely suitable for a beginner making modest-sized prints, or for retaining a rotary drum system and tempering bath.
 
If your sink is designed to hold a significant amount of liquid then you really do need a drain. Trying to bail the sink out or carry it to an existing sink is asking for trouble.
 
I bought a 20" X 44" X 5" deep plastic tray from a hydroponics store, and built a table around it, with water taps installed on the table itself. I also installed a drain. I use it to put all my trays in for 8 X 10, but for 11 X 14 one tray has to go on the table. The plastic tray has to be supported underneath. The cost was about $30 for the tray. If I had a bigger darkroom I would have bought a bigger tray, but this one works fine.
 
Thanks for the additional ideas. I'm leaning toward some sort of large drip tray, and possibly that adjustable height table from Costco. I'm only calling it a sink because it'll be to catch spills and be large enough for multiple trays, but I'm not washing prints in it or anything. A large enough drip tray for all my 8x10 trays to fit comfortably will work, I think a suitable table is what's going to take more thought. I originally lumped the two questions together because I was planning on building a 2x4 and plywood table/sink combo in one piece. I don't need portability and it won't be moving, but adjustable height would be sweet.
 
In the past I built a plywood sink with backsplash and painted it with Moorelastic, but it didn't make the move. I tried one of the under-bed things, but it was too big and floppy to pick up and drai. incidental spills out of. Now I have two big clear Rubbermaid tubs right next to each other on a towel. They are a good size to handle, they nest, they have lids that serve as a makeshift backsplash, and I usd more of the same tubs to store my chemials in. Altogether, it's not a bad setup save for the lack of running water.
 
I built a plywood box the size I wanted, and then bought a 4'x8' sheet of ABS from a local plastics supply house. I cut the plastic to the size I wanted with my table saw, cut 4" high side pieces and then used silicone to attach the pieces together. It's the same stuff that is used for building aquariums. I used Dow Corning 786.

I cut a circular hole in one end of the bottom sheet and put in a shower drain fitting. It is also siliconed to the ABS, and then that gave me a convenient connection to conventional ABS 1-1/2" drain pipe to tie into my house drain.
In my next darkroom I will do that so I can slope to the drain more effectively.
 
Full strength ascetic acid will attack some plastics. My old Kodak graduated cylinder melted when I tried to use it. I think it was styrene. I think any of the soft plastics will be okay for anything you may use.
 
For tables/benches, I'd suggest going to a secondhand furniture store. A secondhand, six foot, steel-framed office table will be cheap and strong.

The various drip-tray options (even polythene off a roll) are a very practical alternative to a sink for catching drips and splashes, especially as a sink is really a darkroom luxury-good until you have a specific process that needs it (which might be years, or never).
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom