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Guide to Quality Mixing
Quality Control Guide for General Radiography

Quality Control Guide for Mammography
Quality Assurance Guide for Mixing X-Ray Chemicals
Non-Hazardous Certification for Shipping
Chemical Compatibility on MR2000
Convert Fahrenheit to Celsius and back with this utility

How to Clean Racks and Tanks Using Red Stuff

How to Clean Racks and Tanks Using Fixer System Cleaner


Chemical Comparisons

CKE v. Kodak RP on Fuji ADM
CKE v. Kodak RP on Kodak Min-R 2000
UHC v. T2AG on AGFA HDR-C
UHC v. AGFA-HD on AGFA HDR-C
UHC v. AGFA-HD on Konika CMH

Chemical Comparison on Kodak MR2000
Chemical Comparison on Agfa MR5
Chemical Comparison on Fuji ADM

Drain Disposal:  As a general rule, when you mix 60 parts of fixer with 40 parts of developer, the resulting mix will have a pH of approximately 6.7 or essentially neutral.  Silver recovery devices and an EPAN (final dilution) chamber should be used everywhere x-ray chemicals are generated as effluents.  Proir to disposal, check with your local EPA or Water department for specific requirements regarding disposal and handling of photographic wastes.  Although disposing of used x-ray chemicals after proper treatment into septic systems is generally accepted and normally safe, when any waste chemical is generated at a facility with a septic system H.R. Simon and company officially recommends hauling effluents for disposal by a waste treatment company.

 

 


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