Until you try it my way how can you tell me that I am wrong, same as I have not tried it your way and I am not telling you that your way is wrong, as far as reels go, I am using reels that are 40 years old, apart from washing the film in the reels nothing else is done, film out and put aside ton dry, every so often pencil around the groves, film slips in, I don't scrub them with toothbrush's Ect, never have and never will as after 59 years of not bothering, and getting good films, I can't see the point, after a professional photographer in 1960 taught me the trick, I found more photographers did it my way and were happy than were not, but so what who really cares, maybe it an American thing compared to a Jersey, or British thing, but 3 pages on how to load a film into a reel, crazy, and it seems to me everyone has a different idea, so tell my WHY you should do more than wash the film in the reels, what difference does it make to the film in the long run, ? and over here a lot of people do the same thing as I do, and have no problems, and don't talk about reels having problems with heavy use, when I was working full time, and I only finally stopped working completely this year, I have been known to develop 40n to 50n films in a week, and I am still using these Paterson reels today, and that is without cleaning,just rinse wetting agent and dry, pencil now and then, I have even loaded film into damp reels when I have been pressed, again, following, lets say, the Jersey method, and no film getting stuck,in the 60's, when I became a pro photographer, black and whuite was king, and we all in the trade followed the same method, and I am still using these same reels today, no problems withb the ball bearings, no films stuck, for 59 years, so could your cleaning and scrubbing of reels be causing some people more problems than they arte solving, it works for me and and many more British photographers than it doesn't work for, all I can advse is before you comment in such a negative way try it, you may be surprised, and remember, 60 years ago, when just starting as a boy of 10 I TRIED IT YOUR WAY, every reel was cleaned, white as snow, cleaned with an old toothbrush, I didn't use a changing bag, they were not around then, did it all in the darkroom,reels were dried with a old hair dryer, and EVERY TIME I loaded a film it was taking 15 or 20 minutes,no matter how careful I was the film stuck, and I am talking Kodak film nhere, would stick, 35mm or 120, ( new folders family presents) and I was ruining more film than I was printing, until I was taught the pencil trick by a Professional photographer, I will never forget his words, never mind cleaning the reels so carefully, iot makes no difference to the film, I have not ''cleaned'' a reel since, it made no difference to my fillme, and my films have never stuck since