Thank you for the answer, i am aware that i`m being insistent - but i`m actually trying to understand what is going on there.
1: Indeed. I did not pay attention to the top coat in the cross-section. You mentioned the top coat before, but i forgot to also consider this when looking at the cross section.
2: Yes, i did put the brown lines over some silver crystals to make the silver-free area better visible. It is small, but i wanted to show that it does exist.
Yes, there is bigger distance between crystals in the blue layer, than the crystal-free area between the blue and the green layer. But this cross-section only is two dimensional. We don`t know what the distance to the next grain was this cross-section was cut from.
Also this is a cross-section of a three-layer film. As far as i know that`s a very simple kind of color film. A "real" color film should have about 20 layers or so. Was it possible that with a "real" color film, silver layers are thinner than here?
Silver is a very conductive metal, dry gelatin is not.
The fact that the spark manages to jump the base but the predominant color is blue made me come to the conclusion that there must be some sort of insulating effect going on. If there was no insulating effect, there should be white "flashes" and black surrounding but no color.
If there is no insulating effect, why is there blue at all (or red if you did face emulsion down). Spark through at a certain spot = everything exposed, everything white, no color.
Seeing your post #35 while typing this, i have to think about this - but as i want to post this reply, a quick idea:
Does skin effect apply here? I am aware of this effect, but it does happen if you have a conductor like a cable for your room lamp or HiFi. A film clamped between cathode and anode... ain`t this a different setup?
But as said i want to post this, i have to think about this.