>...Seriously, it was recurring problems with all of the labs I worked with, 
>including some expensive >pro labs...

I've had just the opposite experience

Although I've mainly shot slide film (only about 99.9% of my non business 
images) for 35+years, - many of those years I'd shoot hundreds of 36 exp 
rolls- I've had only one screw up during the processing - most processing 
was of the mail out type.  It occurred during the processing of several 
rolls taken with my then new Spotmatic, on my honeymoon. Somehow a few of 
those rolls got mixed up with someone taking semi-nude photos of a female 
subject. Never did get some of the honeymoon rolls.

Also for 18 years, on my job, I was taking 10 to 15 rolls of print film each 
week (forensic evidence) and never had an issue with those rolls during 
processing, even tho we normally used the lowest cost processor.

Kenneth Waller
http://tinyurl.com/272u2f


----- Original Message ----- 
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Sensor cleaning


> And then it gets trashed in the lab:-). Seriously, it was recurring 
> problems with all of the labs I worked with, including some expensive pro 
> labs, that led me to make the leap to the dark side.
> Paul
> -------------- Original message ----------------------
> From: "Bob Blakely" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> From: "Paul Stenquist" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>
>> > Film is much harder to clean than a sensor.
>> > Paul
>>
>> Yes, it is, but you get a new, fresh, brushed (thanks to the design of 
>> the
>> can) sensor for each shot. Further, as it rolls onto the takeup reel, it
>> protects itself.
>>
>> Regards,
>> Bob...


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