Originally Posted by
Kevin Crisp
Just to give it context, I've been using Kodak Rapid Fixer for at least 50 years. I mix up a gallon, use it and use it with no regard to capacities. At some point after about 6 to 9 months it goes bad (little white flakes) and I dump it and make up a new batch. After my recent issues with the 'No-Promise' Kodak version and its short (NOT "indefinite") shelf life, I thought I'd try TF-5.
I mixed a gallon of it 36 days ago. I've used it a few times, with no complaints other than it not seeming particularly rapid with Tmax films. I've used a very, very weak acid stop bath which per the manufacturer should be OK. So today I'm developing film and I find my gallon of it filled with little white flakes -- hundreds of them. Filtered yes, it still works. But it stinks like ammonia.
So why do you folks like this stuff? It seems extremely uneconomical given the short life span. I'm on septic now since the move, so I try to keep the liquid waste I have to transport for disposal down to a minimum. A gallon of bad fixer a month is another issue.
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