Was cleaning my freezer and found several rolls of 35mm Kodak infrared,Ilford SFX, and Ilford Pan F, all dated from 1999 to 2003. Now, I wondering if the film is still good to use? -- Jonpaul:confused:
Was cleaning my freezer and found several rolls of 35mm Kodak infrared,Ilford SFX, and Ilford Pan F, all dated from 1999 to 2003. Now, I wondering if the film is still good to use? -- Jonpaul:confused:
Don't know about infrared, but frozen PanF will last forever and a few days.

Ralph, are those English unit days or the standard metric days?
Steve
What's the definition of eternity?
If I remember correctly, the answer goes like this:
In a land far far away there is a gigantic mountain made of pure diamond. Once every 1 million years a bird comes by and sharpens its beak. As soon as the entire mountain is grind to the ground, one second of eternity has passed.
Frozen PanF will last not quite that long but almost.
What's the definition of eternity?
If I remember correctly, the answer goes like this:
In a land far far away there is a gigantic mountain made of pure diamond. Once every 1 million years a bird comes by and sharpens its beak. As soon as the entire mountain is grind to the ground, one second of eternity has passed.
Frozen PanF will last not quite that long but almost.



So, metric or English? It's important to make the distinction.
Thomas
Did you know that metric is English and England is metric?
The way I remember it, the mountain was made of granite. If a feather rubbed against it every thousand (or maybe ten thousand) years. By the time it's worn away, only a second has passed for eternity.
In my middle school, our teacher would read something from Chicken Soup for the Soul (or whatever that stupid book was called). That was one of the things our teacher read. It was 8:00AM, so it might have well been a mountain of diamond. 8:00AM really isnt the best time to try to instill within me some philosophical piece of wisdom. Actually, I'm from Alabama, so I'm probably not going to be affected by philosophical wisdom any time of the day
to the OP: As for the frozen film, load some up and get to shooting. Finding out how it "should" behave really doesnt do any good because of differences in freezers, defrost cycles, cosmic radiation in your part of the world, your political and religious beliefs, and what astronomical sign you were born under. So if you have a good freezer, you're a Libertarian with a moderatly liberal interpretation of your religion, and you're a Pisces, you're film is most likely safe
BTW... this is my first post since the APUG upgrade![]()
Did you know that metric is English and England is metric?
I do have a good freezer; How did you know I was a Pisces? - -jonpaul

... ( and also sadness - damn Kodak for stopping production on this film! ).
What's the definition of eternity?
If I remember correctly, the answer goes like this:
In a land far far away there is a gigantic mountain made of pure diamond. Once every 1 million years a bird comes by and sharpens its beak. As soon as the entire mountain is grind to the ground, one second of eternity has passed.

I bet it's great. I've used some Kodak EIR that expired in 1999 and was not refrigerated, let alone frozen, and it produced good results at box speed.
Was cleaning my freezer and found several rolls of 35mm Kodak infrared,Ilford SFX, and Ilford Pan F, all dated from 1999 to 2003. Now, I wondering if the film is still good to use? -- Jonpaul:confused:
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