Nice idea.. However the director of the production may wish to portray red "blood" dripping from or adhering to body parts immersed in and then removed from the fluid. I doubt that red lighting of the pool would allow dripping/adhering liquid to appear red to the audience.
David Haugen
Retired in Illinois
P.S. Perhaps I missed it: Has anyone suggested microfiltration for sterilization?
From: "pgra**At_Symbol_Here**usa.com" <pgra**At_Symbol_Here**USA.COM>
To: DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**MED.CORNELL.EDU
Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2012 4:46:23 PM
Subject: Re: [DCHAS-L] Update on theatrical blood bath
Could you bypass the red dye by using red lights in the baths? Instead of shining white light on red dye which reflects red and absorbs the rest of the wavelengths just provide what you want-red light coming out of the bath. Best regards, Paul Grasso
All,
I can't thank you all enough. As you may remember we were discussing 1500 gallons of theatrical blood that was going to be pumped from six 275 gallon tanks into a wading pool on stage about every three days, exposed to air and feet, and back into the tanks again repeatedly for about 6 weeks.
After reading through all of the answers, I decided there probably was no disinfectant system that would work due to the 10% loading of organic chemicals in the water and heat needed to be explored as an option. The question now is the temperature. Sterilization of water requires a rolling boil, but ain't no way those temps can be achieved under the conditions at the theater's holding tanks. What about pasteurization temperatures? Would they be enough? I've now even heard about strange thingies called hemophyllic actinomycetes that survive all kinds of heat. But I'm not a bug person so I called on the CDC for help.
This is to let you all know I got the call yesterday and the CDC is on the case. I talked at length to the person leading this charge and it was confirmed we were right: there is no disinfectant system that will hold under these conditions without also being toxic to the waders and even to the breathers of air in the theater.
I will let you know what happens. Again: many thanks.
Monona