aizan
Veteran
how hard is it to do manually? got any methods to control temperature, time, and agitation precisely and consistently enough? is the difficulty overblown?
Aizan: Many years ago I did a few rolls of Agfachrome and Ektachrome in E6 chemistry from Bogen or Tetenal... I can't remember. I was scared s#@tless that my shots would be pooched.aizan said:how hard is it to do manually? got any methods to control temperature, time, and agitation precisely and consistently enough? is the difficulty overblown?
aizan said:how hard is it to do manually? got any methods to control temperature, time, and agitation precisely and consistently enough? is the difficulty overblown?
kiev4a said:The color chemicals are quite perisable after they are mixed so the only way to do it at home and be cost effective is to have enough exposed rolls so you can used the kit to it's maximum capacity fairly quickly.
phototone said:That is a load of blarney. I have processed E-6 for 30 years, Before I got my sink line, I used to process a lot of film using the 1/2 gallon processing kit offered by Kodak. I used old 1/2 gallon bleach bottles thoroughly rinsed out, got them from the waste bins at Laundromats. These are opaque, but white. I used to put a big wash tub into my bathtub put the full bottles of chemistry in it, and fill the wash tub with 110f water, I would then turn the water down to trickle water into it at slightly above 100 degrees, and leave it for an hour or so for the chemicals to warm up. It might take longer. The surplus water would spill over the wash tub into the bathtub and go right down the drain. I would process the film with my stainless steel tanks immersing the tank between agitation cycles in the tub of water, perhaps sitting it on a submerged riser so as to not let the water get over the top of the tank. I would use each chemical and then repour it into its jug with a funnel, recap it and then sit it on the floor, outside the tub, so as to have a good idea of what was already done. I used to mix up chemistry once a month, sometimes I would wait two months, still got good results. The only really critical chemical for precise temperature control is the first developer, which should be within 1/2 degree of 100f. The Color Developer can vary 1 or 2 degrees either side of 100f, and the others can vary up to about 10 degrees.
If you can't use up the capacity of a 1/2 gallon kit within 30 to 45 days, you can extend the life of the kit by mixing up new First & Color Developers as these are the only ones that have a limited life span. Over the years Kodak has made running improvements in the process and it is now the most stable process ever.
The results using fresh chemistry in a home processing situation can be even better than the automatic processing machines used by 1 hour labs, as they use replenished chemistry, which may be years old, and if they don't run test strips regularly and adjust the process their results will not be the same quality as fresh chemistry used and then disposed of within a couple of months. At home, you can "push" your film also by extending the developing time in the first developer. Sometimes you may want to do this to extend the life of the first developer if you are approaching the end of the 30 to 45 days and you need to get one or two more rolls processed.
Everything I say above is from personal experience of many years, and may deviate from the technical data published by Kodak. I still process E-6 regularly for my Commercial Studio photography, but I have an old Kreonite water-jacket sink with stainless steel 3.5 gallon tanks for each chemical and nitrogen burst and air burst agitation now. I still have to manually dip and dunk the reels or hangers of film though, no automation there, just me and a timer with glo-in-the-dark hands. However, if my volume for my own commercial work dwindled down to a bare minimum I would not hesitate to go back to the 1/2 gallon jugs and do it in a wash tub.
Additional note. You can use a cheap thermometer, just calibrate it against a known accurate thermometer at 100f.
For those of you who might be curious, the timings of the process are as follows, and this is using Kodak chemistry. 100f processing temperature.
First Developer 6.5 min.
Water Rinse 2 min
Reversal Bath 2 min.
(remaining steps can be in light)
Color Developer 6 min.
Pre-bleach 2 min.
Bleach 6 min. (vigorous and frequent agitation)
Fix 4 min.
Wash 6 min.
Final rinse (similar to Photoflo) 30 sec.
hang up in dust free place to dry.
Trius said:Finally, what phototone said about the results potentially being better than commercial processing is true. One-shot or limited use of chemicals maintains consistency of processing. I remember when I pulled my first roll of Agfachrome 50 out and man, was I amazed at how good it looked! Isn't Tetenal a German firm? Must have been the synergy between their chemistry and Agfa film!
Trius