Darkroom Supplies - FPP 110 BW Developer - 1 Liter (Kodak HC-110 equivalent)
FPP-110 BW Developer (Concentrate)
Compare to Kodak HC-110 - Same quality! The Nice Price!
FPP-110 Developer is a highly concentrated liquid developer. It is intended for use with a variety of black-and-white films, some graphic-arts films, and some glass plates. Dilute the same as you would HC110.
We ship FPP110 (liquid chemistry) to US and Canada only. Orders including liquid chemistry cannot ship via Priority Mail or any other expedited service. UPS Ground only.
If you are looking for a smaller container of HC-110, we recommend our smaller FPP 110 in our 8 oz size.
Info on mixing and usage - http://imaging.kodakalaris.com/sites/prod/files/files/resources/j24.pdf
Leslie Lazenby's comments and tips on Kodak FPP-110 -
"It comes supplied as a concentrate. Even though you can mix it to a stock solution further dilution is needed before using. Most find it easier to just mix it for a one shot working dilution right before use. A nice advantage when you use these liquid supplied developers is it is so easy to quickly get to your proper processing temperature. 110's selling points are ease of use, versatility, and reliability. The concentrate keeps for years; (4 to 5 years air tight).
All types of black-and-white film can be developed with HC-110, and results are consistent.
Where FPP-110 really shines for me is with old outdated films, it gives surprisingly little base fog even with very prolonged development. Old films have their fair share of age fog and 110 gives me a better chance of a usable negative. Like Rodinal, 110 keeps very well and gives very reproducible results. It is a good choice when failure would be costly."
On mixing:
"FPP-110 developer can be mixed two ways. Mix a stock from the concentrate, then mix a working solution from this stock OR mix a working solution from the concentrate.
Since the concentrate has such a long shelf life, years, most people just mix to working solution. With FPP110 you always develop with working solution, unlike some developers which can use both stock and working.
Developing Times
The first thing you will notice when looking up your developing times with FPP-110 is there are many options, dilutions, these are referred to with alphabetic nomenclature. Dilution B is very popular, here is how it is mixed.
Dilution B is mixed 1:31 for your working solution.
One part FPP-110 concentrate is mixed with 31 parts of water. Example, if I mixed 1 ounce of concentrate, I would add 31 ounces of water, this gives me 32 ounces of working solution, and if you mixed it at the proper temperature you are ready to go. If this is too much or too little for your film tank you can mix it by starting with the amount you need. Again this is from concentrate, and we will work in milliliters, ml, this time. Dilution B is 1:31 added together is 32, 32 parts. If you need 300ml for your tank divided 300 ÷ 32. This is 9.375ml, your 1 unit, and 9.375 x 31 = 290.6 is your water units, thus added together is 300ml of Dilution B working solution. You should always use a minimum of 6 ml concentrate, even it it makes more than you need."
Storing your FPP-110
Buy a bottle and fill with marbles as you use it or pour some into smaller bottles and cap then use out of only one until it's gone.
Crystals floating? Don't Panic!
On occasion, you may see some crystals forming in the bottom of your bottle. These crystal chunks are no problem. Warm the bottle slightly, swirl around until they dissolve back into it. Don't want to wait? Strain them out with a coffee filter. Just remove or dissolve before diluting.