Thanks, John. It looks a mess. Thinking I need to toss it.
On Jul 26, 2021, at 9:05 PM, John Stockdale <jstoc@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
If it has been cold, maybe the components could not stay in solution.
Sometimes gentle warming can help crystals go back into solution.
However, if the color has changed, my guess is that some reaction has taken
place and that would not be reversible. When "Kodak" changed from the old
water-free formulation to something more conventional, there was discussion
about how long it would last. My guess is that it will still work but maybe
a bit weaker.
================================================
On 27/07/2021 10:24 am, hksvk wrote:
I bought a plastic bottle of HC-110 in May 2018 and divided it into glass=============================================================================================================
jars with tight-fitting caps as I had done before that. It was a new style,
badged Kodak, but from a European source, I think, source. It was not nearly
as syrupy as the former version. It was as active, as claimed. I have a last
bottle of it on the shelf, and it still had a good color. But on closer
look, it had delicate, 3-D complex crystals floating about, mostly about a
half inch long, maybe more. When I shook the bottle to see if they would
dissolve, the concentrate turned yellowish-brown and turbid with what looked
like dust bunnies floating around but mostly settling on the bottom.
I was suspicious of the stuff before any use, so got the tech sheet for
it—KODAK PROFESSIONAL HC-110 DEVELOPER—and under that KODAK ALARIS.Dated
December 2017, pub. J-24.
Anyone have an idea about what’s going on with this stuff? I haven’t tested
it, maybe I will, but that seems unnecessary to condemn it to the drain.
Thanks,
Harry
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