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XTOL 11 YEAR OLD STOCK SOLUTION WORKED

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mshchem

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OK, so I have a bottle of XTOL stock solution. I mixed this with RO water on April 15, 2006. It got mixed into some other stuff when we moved. I found it a couple years ago. I thought boy that stuff is brown. So then I think I should wait until it's 10 years old and try it. Well it made it to 11 years and 2 days.
I had a crappy day at work. So I had to prove the impossible . Note brown XTOL, with date. 2nd photo, miraculous Jobo Duolab processor at work processing film. Final photo test snaps on TMY2, hanging to dry. So the moral of the story, even in PET soda bottle, if you squeeze all the air out of the bottle XTOL lasts, well like 11 years. Your Mileage May Vary. I'm SO HAPPY:D:laugh::smile::tongue: Mike from Iowa City
XTOL1.jpg
XTOL2.jpg
XTOL3.jpg
 
Why am I not surprised?
 
I am amazed since mine went dead in two weeks.
 
OK, so I have a bottle of XTOL stock solution. I mixed this with RO water on April 15, 2006. It got mixed into some other stuff when we moved. I found it a couple years ago. I thought boy that stuff is brown. So then I think I should wait until it's 10 years old and try it. Well it made it to 11 years and 2 days.
I had a crappy day at work. So I had to prove the impossible . Note brown XTOL, with date. 2nd photo, miraculous Jobo Duolab processor at work processing film. Final photo test snaps on TMY2, hanging to dry. So the moral of the story, even in PET soda bottle, if you squeeze all the air out of the bottle XTOL lasts, well like 11 years. Your Mileage May Vary. I'm SO HAPPY:D:laugh::smile::tongue: Mike from Iowa City
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Why your XTOL was not "brown", just a bright yellow. I have seen "fresh mixed" developers that yellow. Congratulations on having the, should I say "guts" to develop a roll of film in eleven year old developer and thank you for letting us see the results. What is RO water? When I mix mine, it will be in distilled water then poured into a bottle, plastic. with no room for air and at that time I will know that I or someone will have usable developer for maybe eleven years thanks to you........Regards!
 
Why am I not surprised?
I was shocked, the negatives look normal. I thought it would be a clear piece of acetate. I've used XTOL that was well over a year old. But this was fascinating, I am a fanatic about topping off bottles. I guess it works
Mike
 
Why your XTOL was not "brown", just a bright yellow. I have seen "fresh mixed" developers that yellow. Congratulations on having the, should I say "guts" to develop a roll of film in eleven year old developer and thank you for letting us see the results. What is RO water? When I mix mine, it will be in distilled water then poured into a bottle, plastic. with no room for air and at that time I will know that I or someone will have usable developer for maybe eleven years thanks to you........Regards!
Reverse Osmosis water, pretty close but not quite as pure as distilled. I split up my 5 liter batches into a bunch of smaller bottles. I never save a partial bottle. I fill up the next smaller bottle and toss any left over.
Mike
 
I think the record was previously 7.5 years:
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
That's what mine looked like I added about 50% to the development time but the negatives look normal. I will try to get a print later this week. I would like to see someone make a print with an 11 year old ink jet cartridge.
 
I store my Xtol in winebags and have gotten over 18 months use out of it but towards the end I was testing it each time with the leader to avoid nasty surprises. Eventually it failed and I noticed the only change was that it had slightly yellowed compared to a clear colour like water. I had assumed that once it went to a straw colour it was exhausted. Well it was in my case but clearly it works when even darker.

Pretty amazing

pentaxuser
 
mix your XTOL with distilled water
To prepare Xtol stock I'm using "battery water" or "water for steam ironing" etc., i.e. deionised water from car supplies or supermarket. This is often (nearly always?) contaminated with some germs; such de-ionised water is not considered safe for drinking.
If this Xtol stock is not seriously sterilised (e.g. sterilised bottles, the water boiled, or UV-sterilisation of solution), some kinds of slime will eventually start growing - sometimes becoming visible after only two weeks, affecting developer activity and starting a process of "slow Xtol death".
But then, who deliberately commits his film to this slimy soup?
For this reason, though, I don't keep Xtol in dark bottles anymore, I need to see that the stuff is clear and clean!
I've tried to run a small test on the topic: Xtol remained perfectly ok for about 4.5 years, with no loss of activity, when kept under clean and air-tight conditions (PET bottles, UV-sterilisation repeated about 2x/year). The test ended when the Xtol was finally used.
 
To prepare Xtol stock I'm using "battery water" or "water for steam ironing" etc., i.e. deionised water from car supplies or supermarket. This is often (nearly always?) contaminated with some germs; such de-ionised water is not considered safe for drinking.
If this Xtol stock is not seriously sterilised (e.g. sterilised bottles, the water boiled, or UV-sterilisation of solution), some kinds of slime will eventually start growing - sometimes becoming visible after only two weeks, affecting developer activity and starting a process of "slow Xtol death".
But then, who deliberately commits his film to this slimy soup?
For this reason, though, I don't keep Xtol in dark bottles anymore, I need to see that the stuff is clear and clean!
I've tried to run a small test on the topic: Xtol remained perfectly ok for about 4.5 years, with no loss of activity, when kept under clean and air-tight conditions (PET bottles, UV-sterilisation repeated about 2x/year). The test ended when the Xtol was finally used.
Mine is stored in a cool cellar . Temperature rarely exceeds 20 C. This may help to keep growth in check . UV sterilization is a very clever solution ☺
Best Mike
 
...If this Xtol stock is not seriously sterilised (e.g. sterilised bottles, the water boiled, or UV-sterilisation of solution), some kinds of slime will eventually start growing - sometimes becoming visible after only two weeks, affecting developer activity and starting a process of "slow Xtol death"...
I mix XTOL stock solution using steam-distilled water and store it in 20 250ml amber glass bottles with Teflon-lined caps. As soon as the day after mixing, a small amount of white, filamentary precipitate forms at the bottom of each bottle. I pass the stock solution through a standard white coffee filter before using it to develop film. That filtered XTOL has provided consistent sensitometric results up to one year after mixing, stored at room temperatures ranging from 68 through approximately 80 degrees F. I've not had reason to test longer storage times, since I use it up within twelve months and need to mix another five liters. :smile:

I wash out the storage bottles and caps twice with tap water, then once more with distilled water, before letting them completely air dry after each use.
 
That seems to be the best news of the week.
But don't forget that a original box Xtol
may have longer live as we all together!

It will be become an important fact if the last box Xtol you can buy is yours and after then KODAk originally discontinued
Xtol.

But I don't belife KODAk have thoughts to do this in the next years.

But remarkable - congratiolations to you - well done at all.

Have read the older post too.


with regards
 
I have found that I have gotten stock XTOL to last about a year and a half when used and sealed tightly.
 
The great killer of Xtol is not aerial oxidation but the Fenton reaction. So squeezing the air out of the bottle is not the cause for the developer's longevity. The use of deionized water probably is.
 
The great killer of Xtol is not aerial oxidation but the Fenton reaction. So squeezing the air out of the bottle is not the cause for the developer's longevity. The use of deionized water probably is.
Ok, who's Fenton and what's his reaction. I got C's in Physical Chemistry, and they graded on a generous curve. Keep it simple :smile:
Mike
 
Capture.PNG
Fenton is a street in Silver Spring, Maryland.
 
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