Yet another post about x-raying film...but it's different this time. It was a chest x-ray, not an airport scanner.
So I'm on the road and needed to go to the doctor and get a chest x-ray. Accidentally left my bag with all my film in it in a basket on the floor of the chest x-ray room. It'll be at least two weeks before I get a chance to develop any from this batch. Does anyone have any sense of how much damage a chest x-ray would be to film?
The x-ray technician left the room during the x-ray so presumably the whole room gets blasted, not just the area between the machine and the sensor behind my chest. So the film could have been exposed even if not in the direct path.
I'm just looking for something along the lines of "That film is toast" or "You won't know until you develop." If we know for a fact that the film is toast, I'll just stop using it altogether and buy new film while I'm still on the road, but if the answer is that the effect is unknown, I'll take a risk and continue using it. I have no sense of how strong medical chest x-ray is compared to airport scanners, but given that film generally survives a single pass through airport x-ray with minimal effects, I'm leaning towards continuing to use the film I had on me in that xray room.
So I'm on the road and needed to go to the doctor and get a chest x-ray. Accidentally left my bag with all my film in it in a basket on the floor of the chest x-ray room. It'll be at least two weeks before I get a chance to develop any from this batch. Does anyone have any sense of how much damage a chest x-ray would be to film?
The x-ray technician left the room during the x-ray so presumably the whole room gets blasted, not just the area between the machine and the sensor behind my chest. So the film could have been exposed even if not in the direct path.
I'm just looking for something along the lines of "That film is toast" or "You won't know until you develop." If we know for a fact that the film is toast, I'll just stop using it altogether and buy new film while I'm still on the road, but if the answer is that the effect is unknown, I'll take a risk and continue using it. I have no sense of how strong medical chest x-ray is compared to airport scanners, but given that film generally survives a single pass through airport x-ray with minimal effects, I'm leaning towards continuing to use the film I had on me in that xray room.