ampguy
Veteran
thanks for the info.
thanks for the info.
You could be right. But there would be a difference in using an M8 in the cold then bringing it in, versus carrying or storing it in the cold, and then opening it. I was speaking to the former.
Interesting about the film question. What are the results to look for of condensation of film pulled out of the refrigerator and used immediately, especially if your refrigerator is at 40 deg F, and 40% RH, and you plan to shoot in 15 deg. F, 60% RH?
I usually do wait an hour before using film, especially in the summer, but sometimes take the film out of the canister right away, but if this isn't a good idea, thanks for the tip.
thanks for the info.
You could be right. But there would be a difference in using an M8 in the cold then bringing it in, versus carrying or storing it in the cold, and then opening it. I was speaking to the former.
Interesting about the film question. What are the results to look for of condensation of film pulled out of the refrigerator and used immediately, especially if your refrigerator is at 40 deg F, and 40% RH, and you plan to shoot in 15 deg. F, 60% RH?
I usually do wait an hour before using film, especially in the summer, but sometimes take the film out of the canister right away, but if this isn't a good idea, thanks for the tip.
Sure about that? when I was growing up about a century and 20 camera generations ago, the advice was to put the camera in something when taking it from cold to warm so that the condensation would happen on the container, not the camera. And not bring it out of that container until the camera temp had risen to the ambient temp. It also helped not to capture too much air in the container -- defeated the purpose. Same reason we were told not to take the film out of canisters immediately after removing it from the freezer/refrigerator.
But it sounds like this may be more battery performance related than condensation related.