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DiXactol™ supplementary notes on processing
(3 Pages)
On the DiXactol™ instruction sheet some people may tend to skip over the 'Caution' subheading thinking that it just gives the usual safety warnings about photographic chemicals. Those warnings are shown, of course, and we should observe them carefully. However, there is also a warning about negative unevenness which is also important, and may be overlooked. The vast majority of DiXactol™ users have no problems whatsoever, but if you do, here is some troubleshooting information.

Do not be perturbed if either of the two solutions looks slightly cloudy. Both are virtually saturated solutions, and this appearance is normal and will not detract from development effectiveness.

It is a fact that any tanning and staining developer is sensitive to factors that tend to cause unevenness during development. DiXactol™ is too, especially in its two bath form. The benefits of the developer are well worth any extra care that may be needed.

The key issues causing such unevenness are contamination of reels and tanks, and the quality of the local water supply. If one or both of these is a problem, no amount of agitation modification will cure it. Some people encountering unevenness have been tempted to greatly increase the agitation. This does not work, and indeed gives much greater density at the edges of the film than the centre.

In the case of contamination, reels and tanks may appear to be scrupulously clean, and thorough rinsing has always been given after use previously in other developers and processing solutions, yet the first time DiXactol™ is used, there may be marks at the edges of the film where they are held in the spiral. The good news is that the use of DiXactol™ once seems to clear this problem for each reel concerned in many cases. Single bath development is much less prone to this problem - see below.

Water quality is a separate problem. The characteristics of water vary infinitely in different geographical areas, and they vary in the same area from time to time. It is not enough, for instance, that water is soft from the tap. It may well, for instance, be slightly acid as well, which inhibits the development and the tanning and staining action. Nor is filtering which removes solids necessarily an answer. Traces of non-solid materials in the solution may well also be present. The possible variables are just so great that it is impossible to predict. Use of purified (deionised) water available from all pharmacists economically or distilled water to mix the developer working solution (not the other processing solutions or wash) usually solves this.

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