I think my reasoning is that a loosely rolled film acts like a spring and can push against the pressure plate especially if there is enough time between shots for the film to relax.
Ok, I see your point. I don't think that'll happen though, given the pressure of a typical pressure plate which AFAIK far exceeds the spring of a partially uncurled piece of 120 roll film.
As for your 'fog' and focus issue the Ai suggested that a light leak may cause an otherwise sharply focused image to 'appear' less sharp and I don't understand your problem with that.
In principle I have no 'problem' with that; I just (1) see not evidence for it here and (2) to me, a fogged image doesn't look less sharp. It'll look less contrasty and I can see how people might mistake that for less sharp. I just think it's a sloppy wording and therefore somewhat misleading.
Halation is a different effect from overall fog, but my concerns about projecting that onto sharpness would be similar.
the Ai he invoked offered misleading suggestions for the problem at hand in this thread
Yeah, that's my main qualm, I guess. I don't deny the potential usefulness of AI - I just keep getting the feeling that proper use of AI still relies on understanding a lot about what we're asking of it. And that sort of defies the purpose - we can only use it well if we already understand, but then we don't really need to use it in the first place. Of course, that's a little facetious of me, but even if you're more optimistic, it leaves the problem of using AI without sufficient domain knowledge bringing the risk of not being aware of the ways it may lead one astray.