j-fr said:
Use ISO data to compare films, use EI to make pictures.
The film speed, ISO or EI, is only half the story. A film speed is like a fish without water. You need to know both the speed and the contrast. Only then can you start making photographs.
Although this is correct in theory regarding speed vs contrast, it is actually ony 'correct' for ISO and ASA which are rather constant regardless of mid-scale contrast, and EI which varies very much according to contrast. (this is a relative statement with relation to these 3 values)
The thing that damps this out is that a good negative film must have a long straight line portion to the curve to have good latitude, and the ANSI standards define that the mid-scale contrast of the best negative films should be between 0.5X and 0.6X or about 0.55 - 0.65 (IIRC - I have forgotten the exact values unfortunately and have no reference here to them).
Some ANSI definitions seem to do this in terms of latitude and Dmax while others seem to do this in terms of contrast. Since I have usually read much of this in the works of others on this matter, it may be their way of interpreting the standard for some degree of simplicity.
Now, the thing is that Kodak B&W and color films are designed with a contrast of about 0.6 - 0.63. The professional products are near the lower value and the consumer products are at the higher value (due to lens flare expected in cheaper cameras or single-use cameras). In any event, this coupled with the toe shape allows the ASA, ISO and EI to be close in value.
In theory, you could have a high contrast, soft toe product which had similar EI, ISO and ASA values, but I wouldn't give the product a long life time. No one would like the results. It would have short latitude and bad tone reproduction along with a number of other faults. By math models, it is possible to come up with an 'ideal' toe and mid scale that yields the best film curve for all, but also brings EI, ISO and ASA into close congruence.
By that, I refer you to my comment above. I believe that these values are all within about 1/3 stop of being identical on most modern Kodak films.
PE