It is not enough to simply use Photoflo and water if you want to avoid streaking and other problems. Go to Arkansas Sky Observatory on the Internet and continue to their site about cleaning glass and mirrors. They have great, detailed instructions. Use of Photoflo is involved but pay attention to the proper proportions of the various materials. It works wonderfully. Sent from my iPhone
On Jan 4, 2015, at 3:43 AM, Ryan Simpkins <astro@ryansimpkins.com> wrote:
Interesting tip. Thanks for sharing.
A couple of useful bits of information about Kodak PhotoFlo. It is used heavily in the film industry. Many major motion pictures are still being shot on Kodak film. A good example is the new Star Wars movie that will be released this year. If the photography suppliers stop carrying it, you may be able to pick it up at a motion picture supply company.
The two main ingredients in PhotoFlo are (by weight): 35-40% Ethylene glycol 25-30% p-tert-octylphenoxy polyethoxy ethyl alcohol
(Note, the above is the most concentrated kind. The less concentrated kind add more water.)
Ethylene glycol is essentially anti-freeze. You should dispose of it just like you would normal anti-freeze. Doubly so if you get the high-concentration variety.
I suspect most of the 'magic' is coming from the p-tert-octylphenoxy polyethoxy ethyl alcohol. This is a very powerful and (in this case) highly concentrated surfactant. Various forms of it are used when you need to get something _really_ clean. It is used in industrial cleaning at these concentrations. It is probably a good idea to avoid drinking any. ;-)
Oh... if you have a dog (or any pet) be sure they can't get in to this stuff or lap it up if you accidentally spill some.
-Ryan
On Thu, January 1, 2015 23:46, Richard Tenney via UVAA wrote: Someone recently posted the following in the Criterion Dynascope email forum re: mirror cleaning, that I thought some of you might find useful/interesting. I had never heard of this stuff (and it's probably overkill, but what the heck)... "The best possible soap is Kodak PhotoFlo, which was designed as a last rinse for photographic film. It is the essence of all dish soaps, minus anything else. Still available from B&H and Adorama. Useful anytime you want to avoid water spots, like clear shower panels. It has to be diluted in distilled water 200:1 so a pint goes forever." FWIW,/Rich _______________________________________________ UVAA mailing list UVAA@mailman.xmission.com https://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/uvaa
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