cooked film?

jmilkins

Digited User
Local time
10:19 AM
Joined
Dec 31, 2004
Messages
1,311
Location
landdownunder
I've just discovered I left my camera bag containing an Hex Af and an R3A both with TMAX 100 loaded in my car. It's 26 Celsius / 78.8 farenheit ambient. In car much more. The cameras were very hot to touch - almost uncomfortable - interestingly the Silver Hex more than the Black Bessa.

Have I cooked the photos from my Mum's 75th !? :bang:

Any suggestions for processing to mitigate any effects of the heat?
 
Happened to me last month here in South Florida, hot, hot. Strange enough. I finished the roll, maybe 4 more shots and voila i lost only one frame near the beginning. Go figure.
 
Hmm-I have some TMax 100 in 120 that was in someone's bag for years, it didn't do so well. TriX, on the other hand, lasted 20 years and cameout great!
 
I tried "boil in a bag" camera film (literally heating the film til it was too hot to touch, then letting it cool, load the camera, then go shoot). Nothing really happened to the negs.

Hot chemicals cause a problem though, overdevelopment too fast to control!
 
Ash said:
Hot chemicals cause a problem though, overdevelopment too fast to control!

I read an article a few years ago where Les McLean attempted to produce reticulation on a roll of Delta 400 by washing in iced water and then water @ 50C. He failed completely. Modern film is quite resilient to thermal damage. I have carried film around at >30C without any noticeable ill effects.
 
I've left film in the camera and in the car all summer, > 30C for over a week at a time. No problem.
 
I often leave my loaded camera in the car during work hours. Hot summer days. Cold winter days. No problem with the film.
 
I've had little problem with fresh B&W getting hot during a vacation. Color is another story. I've had color shifts, etc. from that.
Just see what develops! 😎
 
Back
Top Bottom