Rlibersky
Member
Finally got through the thread. I am wondering if some, of the other experimenters, are willing to post some pictures here.
Finally got through the thread. I am wondering if some, of the other experimenters, are willing to post some pictures here.
Those shots came out REALLY nicely... to the extent that it makes me wonder about saving a buck with some Kentmere might not be such a compromise. Great work.
I'm assuming this is safer than Metol
Tim Layton's version of D76 used Metol instead, so this avoids that potential skin issue, too.
Possibly you mentioned this in your linked article, but there's a Timothy Gordish who's linked to E-76: Phenodine = 20cc Sodium Sulfite = 100g , Vitamin C = 8g, and Borax = 12g. Not far off. Suggestion is to use D-76 times. Your formula has 3 development ingredients. Nice. This adds 1. I like that yours has long shelf life, too.
Not necessarily. It's an irritant and toxic. The reason why phenidone-containing developers are often labeled as eco-friendly etc. is because they generally contain a relatively small amount of it. Phenidone powder should be handled with the same type of sane/sensible caution as other developing agents. Don't breathe the dust, avoid any contact with mucous membranes (eyes, nose, mouth), don't get it into your system, avoid skin contact.
Phenidone can trigger contact dermatitis just like other developing agents. Again, the 'safety' of the compound derives mostly from the fact you need to handle much less of the compound in comparison to e.g. metol for the same quantity of an equally effective developer.
When in doubt, always refer to the safety data sheet.
So.... have a set of chems on order from ArtCraft up in NY. Thought I had more of this on hand... but not. Still.... not bad on price.
Look forward to your results!
Well here's a question I'm not sure about: You talk about mixing 300ML of combined - I'll be using different final quantity but that's not the question - and that Solution B is good for 3 to 4 films. I thought you were using this 1 shot. Ambiguity is a detail, but it helps to clear it away if possible. As a matter of reference, I'm using ID-11 one-shot and D23 pretty much the same as well. If you're running the same fluid a few times, then are you adjusting times for a 2nd, 3rd or 4th run?
Great! This helps a lot. THank you.It's all one shot, no re-use.
Where did you guys get your information about phenidone?
It appears to have been listed by the FDA as non-toxic
I don’t have a lot of info, just that the safety data sheets list it as harmful to aquatic life and that it is a skin sensitizer. Both of which are much alleviated by such small quantities.My point was really that phenidone appears to have a lower toxicity than metol for skin sensitisation which comes up as category 1. But it's a bit of a rabbit hole with hard to find comparative data.
There are a number of developers that have 3-4 ingredients and which all have slightly different ratios. These ratios can produce a surprising array of different outputs. The main difference with E-76 is the large amount of sulfite. This is a kind of "magic" chemical in photo chemistry because it serves so many purposes. In D-76 and E-76 one of the main reasons to add it (other than as a preservative) is to aid in the dissolution of the edges of silver halide crystals and thus the exposure of additional latent image centers which may not otherwise be reachable. This is one of the reasons that most developers with sulfite are capable of producing a higher film speed than those without. However, that is only one mechanism and there are many others. In testing and including that of @aparat (now hidden, unfortunately), PC-512 Borax achieves box speed with the tested films so far. I expect that E-76 might produce higher film speed with the same films, but probably it will be less sharp. To me, the simplicity was one of the goals, as was the ability to work from a concentrate, so I am happy without the sulfite.
Koraks is right here. The main reason that phenidone is much safer in developers like PC-512 Borax, is that there is just not very much of it!
Either way, however, I'm a tad leery whether I've got the exact number in the mix even though my scale measures to 2 decimal place....cause some sticks to the spoon, the side of the jar, goes airborne or otherwise AWOL, etc. And when you chief active ingredient is this small and apparently hard to handle, that seems dicier than it probably is. Yes, I'm not a chemist... but the imprecision of real world stuff and real world mixing means it'd be easy to be off .05 grams or more. But I have reasonably enough experience with other developers - commercial and home mixed - to hope that imprecision is fine.
Times given for HP5 seem to run between 8 and 10.25 mins @20C. Delta 400 similarly has times of 8.28 and 9.12 min @ 20C. Some of these were given by others than Karl at 21C and converted back to 20C using the Massive Development Time/Temp converter. But as this sort of fuzziness suggests the merit of estimating time on the basis of the following steps I found either here or in a book somewhere (but seems a bit of arcana rarely discussed) so I'll be curious what times it actually gives and if it works - and frankly that might be a good way to correct for imprecise measurement, too... so this is a good thing to learn to do and on my bucket list anyway in terms of learning controls:
Film - Developer 1st Estimation of Time:
1) Clip a bit of film
2) Dip into the developer - NOTE the TEMP of the developer as the Defined TEMP
3) Time in seconds until the dipped part becomes dark is the TEST TIME for the Defined TEMP
4) Divide the TEST TIME by 3 and that's the recommended time at that temp
5) Repeat the above 2X to have a total of 3 times as a confirmed estimate
Going to go load the 2 rolls of HP5 I have as 1st guinea pigs ( tonight) for this into a tank and grab a 35mm roll I have somewhere unexposed to do some tests, too. I use a Citric Acid STOP
As always, I'm eager for suggestions, corrections, etc. Thanks!
Test 1
I was thinking last night about @albada saying a few times that I should try metaborate in glycol. Referring to the solubility numbers I could find, it doesn't really pencil out as mentioned a few posts back. But I found some numbers for borax that showed that solubility might actually be higher in glycol than in water and I thought that might be even more true for metaborate. And then I was thinking last night that the solution will of course not be only glycol and metaborate: it will also contain ascorbic acid and phenidone. And actually that amount of acid could substantially change the solubility of sodium metaborate. So thanks to Mark (@albada) for mentioning it again. I did an experiment this morning (day off) and was able to get about a 50% solution of metaborate in glycol once the ascorbic acid was added. I tested the following:
This translates to a full formula of (DO NOT USE):
- 6ml of propylene glycol
- 3g sodium metaborate
- 0.7g ascorbic acid
- 0.03g phenidone (from 2.5% glycol solution)
- Stirred and heated into solution
This turns out to actually be too much metaborate and the resulting pH is too high at about 9.25. Knowing this was too high, but wondering what effect that would have on times and density, I tested with a small strip of Ilford Delta 100 and backed the time down to 6 mins 15 secs at 20C. Resulting clip density was way too high at about 2.5 and those are unusable dev times for other films (e.g. Fomapan would be like 4 mins).
- 100ml propylene glycol
- 50g sodium metaborate
- 11.67g ascorbic acid (target is 12)
- 0.5g phenidone
But it looks like there is a possible route there to a working developer.
Test 2
I did a further test to try to narrow in on the amount of metaborate needed to match the pH. I took 6ml of the PC-512 developing agents and added to 300ml of water. I then added small amounts of sodium metaborate and measured pH until I got to about 8.4. This is close to the borax version. I then tested a leader of Ilford Delta 100 for 6 mins 40s at 20C, the time I would normally use. I got a density of 2.10, which is just slightly under what I would normally get. I then developed a full roll in:
Since the density was slightly low, I ran the short film clip for 7 mins. Results look pretty good. Eyeballing it I would say base + fog is a little higher, and maybe density a bit lower. Will post better numbers when the film is dried and I can measure it and scan it.
- 300ml water @ 20C
- 6ml PC-512 concentrate
- 1.2g sodium metaborate
View attachment 332382
The idea then would be to try to make a single concentrate with that amount of metaborate. Assuming that it doesn't change its pH substantially when combining with glycol in heated solution.
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