jljohn
Well-known
You could use a space heater near the film in a dust free room--same effect as a hairdryer, but with less moving air and you don't have to hold it
Pure alcohol works fine. Isopropanol 70% does the job. Take the film, put it in the alcohol bath, take it out again, wait under a minute, voilá! Dry film.
Commercially it went under the name Drysonal. Same stuff, different name, more expensive.
I think that Alcohol is my best bet.
I guess it replaces the water on the surface of the film, and then evaporates quickly, leaving the film with the water in the emulsion.
Tell me if I'm wrong, but it doesn't take a minute to dry the emulsion, right?
OK, so if that works, one question remains:
why aren't we using this all the time?
It should also help with drying spots, right?
because most of use don't need drying times that quick and it costs money. And yes it aids even drying and helps minimising any drying marks/mineral deposits on film.
Yup, sounds like what I had in mind. Thanks.
Did you actually used it?
any known adverse effect?
Rxmd is correct I believe, from what I know. Process and wash film as usual, then as a final step, dip the (wet with water) film into a bath of isopropol alcohol. It will absorb water from the film. Hang it to dry, which will happen very quickly. This alocohol bath can be reused many many times before it becomes slowly ineffective due to increased water content.
Do you think I can use pure alcohol as a start (it will get slightly diluted with use)?
Any known adverse effect on the film? Short or long term?
You can use pure alcohol, but you have to make sure it's really pure. If you buy the cheaper denaturated spirits, they are denaturated with something, and those substances might leave residues.
Methanol is technically possible too, but might be a bad idea because of the risk of poisoning yourself with the fumes. (There's a funny way to combat methanol poisoning by getting really drunk, the ethanol displaces the methanol in the body.)
Isopropanol or something might be the best idea, because it doesn't need denaturation and is non-toxic upon inhalation. Anything over 70% should be fine, it's cheap and will last for a long, long time.
There aren't really any adverse effects on the film that I know of. (Don't use alcohol with colour film, though; it has a competely different chemistry and you might end up with a blank film. This includes XP2, BW400CN etc. But most people don't develop these at home anyway.)
I don't see a problem with that.