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Borax vs 20 Mules
These are Formulary Divided D-76 questions.
1. How many grams of 20 Mule Team does it take to make a gram of pure borax? 2. Teaspoon equivalent? -Lew |
#2
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Borax vs 20 Mules
Lew wrote:
These are Formulary Divided D-76 questions. 1. How many grams of 20 Mule Team does it take to make a gram of pure borax? 2. Teaspoon equivalent? -Lew 1. 20 Team mule borax *is* borax. 2. 4gms per teaspoon will get you to where you need to go... |
#3
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Borax vs 20 Mules
In article ,
"Lew" wrote: These are Formulary Divided D-76 questions. 1. How many grams of 20 Mule Team does it take to make a gram of pure borax? 2. Teaspoon equivalent? -Lew It is pure borax, or pure enough,... no need to convert. -- LF website http://members.bellatlantic.net/~gblank See VC & Camera Arts Magazines for outstanding imagery at www.viewcamera.com or www.cameraarts.com |
#4
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Borax vs 20 Mules
Lew wrote: These are Formulary Divided D-76 questions. 1. How many grams of 20 Mule Team does it take to make a gram of pure borax? 2. Teaspoon equivalent? -Lew Yes, but do not use Boraxo, which is a hand cleaner with other stuff in it, including an abrasive. |
#5
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Borax vs 20 Mules
On Thu, 5 Feb 2004 17:24:41 -0500, "Lew" wrote:
These are Formulary Divided D-76 questions. 1. How many grams of 20 Mule Team does it take to make a gram of pure borax? 2. Teaspoon equivalent? -Lew feb504 from Lloyd Erlick, 'Pure' borax? Depends what that might be. Borax is commercially available in three states of hydration. One can buy anhydrous, pentahydrate and decahydrate. The correct form to get is decahydrate. That is what is sold in supermarkets (unfortunately not in Canadian supermarkets, though. The stuff isn't seen here much.) Photographic formulas seldom stipulate the hydration, but it is taken for granted to be the decahydrate. In photo discussion, the word borax is understood to mean borax decahydrate. No compensation for the weight of the water of hydration should be necessary. It dissolves in room temperature or warm water fairly easily and quickly (it's a laundry additive ...). Therefore, the mules are pulling the righteous stuff. (I hate to think I'm addicted to my darkroom because of Ward Bond, Sundays at my grandmother's...). The decahydrate is most often used commercially because it does not absorb water from the air, does not cake, and if kept covered and clean will not suffer in storage. It's also availble in huge quantities at all times because it's used to do laundry, so it's relatively cheap. The pentahydrate form is fine, although a calculation and adjustment might have to made on the weight, depending on how finicky one is. The pentahydrate has the sad characteristic of absorbing water from the air. It will eventually cake and solidify. I don't know how long this process takes; if it's years, fine, if it's weeks, well, why hunt for pentahydrate when deca is at the store? Penta is to be avoided unless it can be used up quickly and is priced attactively. Do not buy anhydrous borax. Not even if the price is attractive. Not even if they pay you to take it. It will not dissolve in water during your lifetime. You can add all the cosolubilizing agents you like. You can dispose of it if you are mixing enough cement (it's way more expensive than sand, though...). I have learned this the hard way and no one else needs to follow my example. (If it screws up your cement, don't talk to me about it.) Anhydrous borax might be considered 'pure' borax, but it's not useful in the darkroom. I don't know offhand what a teaspoon of decahydrated borax would weigh. Most powders seem to be in the four or five grams per teaspoon range. In most of the applications of borax in the darkroom, especially fixers, the exact weight is not critical. Enough or more than enough is the goal. Maybe for a developer it should be weighed carefully, but even there I'm sure spoon equivalents will work fine. I'd use four (maybe five...) grams per ordinary slightly round teaspoon, and hope if there was error it would be toward slight excess. There is more at www.borax.com. Here's a quote: --- Rio Tinto Borax operates California’s largest open pit mine in Boron, California - one of the richest borate deposits on the planet. The company supplies nearly half the world’s demand for refined borates, minerals essential to life and modern living. Borax traces its roots to California’s Death Valley, where borate deposits were discovered in 1872. The twenty mule teams Borax used to haul ore out of the remote desert... regards, --le --- _______________________________________ Lloyd Erlick Portraits, 2219 Gerrard Street East, unit #1, Toronto M4E 2C8 Canada. --- voice 416-686-0326 http://www.heylloyd.com _______________________________________ |
#7
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Borax vs 20 Mules
Gregory W Blank wrote: In article , wrote: There is more at www.borax.com. Here's a quote: --- Rio Tinto Borax operates California’s largest open pit mine in Boron, California - one of the richest borate deposits on the planet. The company supplies nearly half the world’s demand for refined borates, minerals essential to life and modern living. Borax traces its roots to California’s Death Valley, where borate deposits were discovered in 1872. The twenty mule teams Borax used to haul ore out of the remote desert... Out of curiousity without going to the site how are borates essential to life? -- LF website http://members.bellatlantic.net/~gblank For one thing, they provide a living for a number of people who mine, process, deliver and sell them. Other than that, since they are mined mostly from Death Valley, maybe they just exist in such concentrations to keep some harmful elements from spreading. |
#8
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Borax vs 20 Mules
In article ,
Patrick Gainer wrote: Out of curiousity without going to the site how are borates essential to life? For one thing, they provide a living for a number of people who mine, process, deliver and sell them. Other than that, since they are mined mostly from Death Valley, maybe they just exist in such concentrations to keep some harmful elements from spreading. Then maybe we should not be taking them from where they belong? -- LF website http://members.bellatlantic.net/~gblank |
#9
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Borax vs 20 Mules
Hey, I was wandering down the aisle at the local Meijer's (a chain
supermarket in Michigan) and lo and behold, they have Arm and Hammer WASHING SODA on the shelf... Big boxes of it.. El cheapo... Anyone who is in dire straits let me know and I can arrange to buy a couple and ship em to you - though shipping may run up the tab... denny "Patrick Gainer" wrote in message Yes, but do not use Boraxo, which is a hand cleaner with other stuff in it, including an abrasive. |
#10
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Borax vs 20 Mules
Gregory W Blank wrote: In article , Patrick Gainer wrote: Out of curiousity without going to the site how are borates essential to life? For one thing, they provide a living for a number of people who mine, process, deliver and sell them. Other than that, since they are mined mostly from Death Valley, maybe they just exist in such concentrations to keep some harmful elements from spreading. Then maybe we should not be taking them from where they belong? -- LF website http://members.bellatlantic.net/~gblank I was thinking of crazies who go to Death Valley without proper precautions. |
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