Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/10/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Leon, Sounds like you have got it right. I lived in a house with a septic tank and darkroom for 18 years and never had a problem. I dumped the fixer too. I followed the Kodak document already mentioned. I dumped the chemicals before the final wash so the extra water would dilute the chemicals even more. I also added the commercial septic system rejuvenator stuff from time to time. I am talking primarily about black and white film and paper chemicals. I also dumped 3 step E6 chemicals the same way when volume was low. If I was doing a lot of E6 (40 - 60 rolls in a weekend) I saved it up and took the waste to a commercial lab and they disposed of it for me. Ken > -----Original Message----- > From: LP6@aol.com [SMTP:LP6@aol.com] > Sent: Thursday, October 22, 1998 9:17 PM > To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us > Cc: shruboak@juno.com > Subject: [Leica] Darkrooms and Septic Systems > > > Re: Darkroom Silver and Acid Effluent into Septic Systems: (?) > > Joe Stephenson and Bill Franson have kindly informed me over the LUG that > it > is the used acid fixer that contains the silver and that this can be > retrieved > with a Rotex Silver Recovery Kit. So much for the metal! > > They also inform me that the enemy of the bacterial flora in the septic > system > is acid primarily and that this can be neutralized by allowing the mixture > of > developer and stop bath to stand before discarding into the system. > > Since sodium bicarbonate (backing soda) is often added to septic systems > as a > routine maintenance measure, I suppose extra bicarbonate might assure > further > acid dilution originating from my darkroom operations? So much for the > acid! > > Have I got my facts straight? What have we left out? > > In conclusion, I'm surprised that LUGites haven't encountered this problem > in > greater numbers than the response to my septic quiery on the LUG suggests? > Maybe its the more strict Massachusetts (near Nashua, NH) building codes > vs. > the more relaxed codes elsewhere? Any other thoughts? > > Leon > LP6@aol.com