Bill,

Great information!

Thanks,


Bruce



Monday, February 3, 2003, 12:00:58 PM, you wrote:

BL> Bruce wrote:
BL> An interesting angle for me is that the 120 roll film is spooled on
BL> plastic cores so theoretically I could walk through the metal detector
BL> with them on my person.  Has anyone tried this?  It seems that all the
BL> Kodak film comes in plastic outer wrapper (sealed), but the Fuji and
BL> Agfa use something more like a metal film of some type.  I'm guessing
BL> that would make a difference.  Does anyone have any experience with
BL> this?
BL> ..........................

BL> Bruce, I have tested 120 at San Francisco airport and found that Fuji and
BL> Agfa film wrappers set off the metal detector when carried in my pockets. I
BL> don't remember if Kodak did. Then the guards spend five minutes trying to
BL> figure out what 120 film is. It gets  x-rayed anyway while all your
BL> carrry-on gets searched.

BL> Because I carry 800 and 400 ISO 120/220 sometimes I take them out of the
BL> foil packages and carry them in my baggy travel pants and shirts pockets
BL> through the metal detector. Then I put them in my carry-on shoulder bag.

BL> I also buy 100 ft rolls of Velvia and Provia and load them on PLASTIC
BL> cassettes available from B&H for fifty cents. These plastic casettes are
BL> reusable for a long time and also do not trigger the metal detector if in
BL> your pockets.

BL>  I travel in North Face nylon clothes that have no metal fasteners and I
BL> use an all synthetic web money belt and wear non-metallic sneakers. My
BL> watch and pen go in the carry-on bag. I look pretty lumpy when I am in the
BL> line!

BL> I really do this ritual for the off chance that a carry on x-ray is running
BL> out of specs and might toast my film. I started doing this when I made an
BL> around the world trip in 1999. I carried a lot of film, too much to put in
BL> my pockets but I reserved a limited number of rolls for the special
BL> treatment.  I shipped a load of exposed film home from Asia by a friend -
BL> courrier. I traveled on to Europe and went through  at least 22 airport
BL> carry-on scanners altogether. Some of these scanners were in low-tech third
BL> world ccountries.

BL> I paid attention to what film was in my pockets, what film went to India,
BL> and what film went all around the world. I shot some comparison rolls at
BL> home and sent it all off for processing. I used 120/220 Fuji Reala, Agfa
BL> Optima 400, Agfa APX 100 and Kodak Tri-X, 35mm Provia II, APX 100,Agfa RSX
BL> II 100, Kodak Gold 100 and a bunch of no-name b&w 100 Indian film.

BL> None of the film showed any x-ray damage.

BL> However, we know that current checked baggage scanners are fatal to film. I
BL> still carry  the 800 and 400 film in my pockets.

BL> Bill Lawlor

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