Clint Troy
Well-known
Metal reels can be loaded even if they're completely wet. Which is Fantastic.
Also, common sense and experience dictates that, even without measuring, there's no way a canister of film goes from <10C to 20C+ in less than 60 seconds. Conversely, if it were true, it would mean film is frozen within 2 minutes of putting it in the freezer, right? Crazy talk.
The canister is metal and warms through very rapidly, correct. The film inside it, however, is a poor conductor of heat and is layered not completely tightly (and even if it is, that just leaves an air-gap). I'd lay serious money that after 15 seconds of holding a canister in your hand, the core is still at -18C (if that's what it started at). It will take an awful lot longer than 15 seconds to reach anywhere near hand-temperature. Minutes, many of them, to reach hand temperature through to the core.Bob,
Please take into account that aluminum (or whatever the cassette is made of) is metal and highly conductive. Goes from 0-20 to _ 20 in seconds.
And acetate doesn't freeze.
So yes, 15 seconds is more then enough.
Bob,
Please take into account that aluminum (or whatever the cassette is made of) is metal and highly conductive. Goes from 0-20 to _ 20 in seconds.
And acetate doesn't freeze.
So yes, 15 seconds is more then enough.
And that conductive metal contains very cold non-conductive film. So there's a cold thermal mass, and there's no way that it would reach thermodynamic equilibrium in 15 seconds. FYI - I was trained as a chemist, and I've completed graduate-level thermodynamics courses. But not to worry - I've notified my professors that heat flows much faster than they had led me to believe.
No.
Plastic, like styrofoam, doesn't freeze. Thought about that?
Photo smith, plastic doe not freeze. it warms up in seconds to normal temperature. Best example? Winter tires.
But besides, we're talking a 1 micron thickness layer. Now tell me, who are you trying to kid?
Bob, how long does it take for one single car-key to warm up in your hands right out from the freezer?
Do the test, please.
the plastic will feel warm in 2 seconds. The metal key in about 10.
Can you do that simple test? Or you prefer to continue this silly game?
Are you comparing mirrors and walls in bathrooms during a hot shower to a roll of film?
When i take a hot shower, even the toilet paper becomes completely humid and the roll starts curling. Which is absolutely normal.Drops of water form on my walls. But I'm not sure how this is relevant to our conversation.
But let's make a real comparison, not silly ones, please. Here's my real life test that I have done a few minutes ago:
I have over 500 rolls of film in my freezer and about 5 rolls of polypan-f (That I hate). Just now I took one 36 exposure Polypan-f from the freezer and I unrolled it completely in a zip, at room temp.
I carefully looked at the whole film. I saw absolutely no condensation (which was completely expected not to show up).
I breathed on the roll and a slight cloud of condensation formed and it immediately disappeared. I breathed again, and again, and again and again. About 5 times. The condensation didn't last more then 1 second each time.
The film itself was as warm as the room.
Photo smith, plastic doe not freeze. it warms up in seconds to normal temperature. Best example? Winter tires.
But besides, we're talking a 1 micron thickness layer. Now tell me, who are you trying to kid?
Bob, how long does it take for one single car-key to warm up in your hands right out from the freezer?
Do the test, please.
the plastic will feel warm in 2 seconds. The metal key in about 10.
Can you do that simple test? Or you prefer to continue this silly game?
Are you comparing mirrors and walls in bathrooms during a hot shower to a roll of film?
When i take a hot shower, even the toilet paper becomes completely humid and the roll starts curling. Which is absolutely normal.Drops of water form on my walls. But I'm not sure how this is relevant to our conversation.
Photo smith, plastic doe not freeze. it warms up in seconds to normal temperature. Best example? Winter tires.
But besides, we're talking a 1 micron thickness layer. Now tell me, who are you trying to kid?
Bob, how long does it take for one single car-key to warm up in your hands right out from the freezer?
Do the test, please.
the plastic will feel warm in 2 seconds. The metal key in about 10.
Can you do that simple test? Or you prefer to continue this silly game?
sepiareverb said:As to plastic not freezing and winter tyres: why then are there then winter tires? Special versions which do not freeze. Hmmm. Scam I suppose. Well what isn't really. All kinds of things get more brittle when it gets colder and they freeze, you live in Montreal you should understand the cold unless those thermophillic hands are just a byproduct of a total thermophillic being. You must thaw the sidewalk with your footsteps! Wow. I really must watch this. Too bad about ice fishing tho. It really is fun.
I can bend spoons and open film cassettes with my mind. This truth cannot be disputed despite my not being able to supply any proof. None is needed. I say it, it must be so. Sadly, the bending also happens to wipe SD cards. Perhaps I accidentally popped those PanF cans on brianentz while working in my darkroom.