- In ASTM, a subcommittee of Committee F-5 on Business Imaging
Products is working on a guide to photocopy permanence that will
appear in a few years. It will include the abrasion test, the hard
crease test, and possibly others. (The test target is available
now, on paper and in software that will generate it on machines
being tested. Contact Theodore Wirth, Chair of F-5, at Industry
Analysts, Inc., Technical Services Division, 201/227-8699.) The
subcommittee is F05.04 on Electrostatic Imaging Products.
Anyone may join ASTM, receive mailings and the newsletter, and
take part in the standards-setting process. For membership
information, call 215/299-5454. For information on future meetings
of F05.04, contact Margie Lawlor at ASTM: 215/299-5518. Anyone may
attend meetings as a visitor.
- ISO/TC 46/SC 10/WG 2 (International Organization for
Standardization, Technical Committee 46, Subcommittee 10, Working
Group 2, on Permanence of Images on Paper), focuses on the
image-paper combination. They are evaluating it for image color
strength and appearance, light fastness, water resistance, blocking
under heat and pressure, resistance to tear, heat resistance and the
effect of the image on the mechanical strength of the paper. At its
meeting last May, the Working Group looked at the optical density of
the image resulting from the various copying and writing methods.
Heat resistance will be measured by standard accelerated aging
tests. Round robin testing in a number of labs was planned to begin
in September 1994.
- Imaging Products Monthly for May 1994 has a list of
toner binders on p. 10-11, assembled by John Cooper, head of Toner
Research Services, Inc. (Black Mountain, NC, 704/669-0510, fax
669-0910). It shows which toner binders are used by each of 60
toner manufacturers. The binders used by most companies, if you
don't count "miscellaneous," the largest category, are styrene
acrylic and wax. Next comes polyester, then styrene butadiene and
acrylic. Those used by fewest companies are epoxy, EVA, polyamide,
and polystyrene. (These binders are not specific compounds, but
families of compounds, the members of which may differ from each
other considerably.) The variety and complexity of this picture
make it clear how hard it is to generalize about the permanence of
toners on the basis of the materials used in their manufacture.
Two references on the permanence of photocopies, for people who
missed them the first time around, are:
- Restaurator v.8 #1, 1987. Special issue:
Preservation Photocopying in Libraries and Archives: Conference of
the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration, Washington,
DC, Dec. 9, 1986. One paper addresses the permanence of photocopies
directly: Sylvia S. Subt: "Archival Quality of Xerographic
Copies," p. 29-39. Fourteen copying systems were examined; most
failed one or more tests, though the Kodak Ektaprint 85 system
passed all of them. Subt has seven "conclusions and
recommendations," which advise against stacking photocopies under
any great pressure (because the toners flow slowly even without
heat, and this makes them stick together). She also warns against
storing copies next to vinyl. She says to use archival quality
paper and to keep the machine well maintained to ensure that the
temperature is right for fusing the toner to the paper. The tape
peel and rub tests are recommended for on-site copy evaluation
techniques.
- Archival Copies of Thermofax, Verifax, and Other Unstable
Records, by Norvell M.M. Jones. National Archives Technical
Information Paper No. 5. National Archives & Records
Administration, Washington, DC, 1990. $17.50 + $4 handling, prepaid,
from National Technical Information Service, Springfield, VA 22161
(703/487-4600). PB 90 171 836. 28 pp., including the 1987 appendix
by S. Subt and J. Koloski that describes the tape peel and rub
tests.
- In addition, two ASTM standards relate to this subject. ASTM
D 3458 - 85, which was reapproved in 1990, focuses on the paper,
but is vague about the permanence of the image. Another standard
is being worked up by the business imaging committee, F 5, and
will be announced when it is ready. It may or may not address
the topic of keeping photocopied images for periods longer than
a few decades.