I was wondering if PE or anyone here could shed some light on this. Is this true? Does film's exposure to x-ray mess up its grain structure? This is what Salgado thinks and why he went to digital:
" after 9/11 it became impossible to talk the authorities into letting him take his cases, containing hundreds of rolls of film, through without being x-rayed. The signs say the machines do not affect film, but they do and if, like Salgado, you pass through six or seven airports on a trip, the effect is catastrophic The grain, he says, loses its structure.
I've had my film x-rayed 6 times going through airports (including Heathrow). All of it carry on, of course, and I've only seen a faint increase in base fog. That's it. Still very printable images. Messed up grain structure? Nope.
" after 9/11 it became impossible to talk the authorities into letting him take his cases, containing hundreds of rolls of film, through without being x-rayed. The signs say the machines do not affect film, but they do and if, like Salgado, you pass through six or seven airports on a trip, the effect is catastrophic The grain, he says, loses its structure.
I've had my film x-rayed 6 times going through airports (including Heathrow). All of it carry on, of course, and I've only seen a faint increase in base fog. That's it. Still very printable images. Messed up grain structure? Nope.

