Quote from pnance:
"Damaging a roll of film is the signal to switch from plastic to SS."
Uhm... no. It just means you did something wrong.
Guys, I have to say... a lot of people seem to have the reaction equivalent to blaming a car for the accident you got into. My own experiences aside, looking at the posts its easy to see that all the reels work, and work well - some just prefer one kind to another. I have had absolutely no problems with the plastic reels. I have never tried SS, even though I meant to, simply because I don't see the point of changing something that works well, even for something that will work just as well.
All the info is here to make the patersons 100% painless:
-make sure they're dry (split them after use - they dry better and let you clean them more thoroughly)
-keep your thumbs over the entry/take-up slots or tabs or whatever you want to call them.
-rather than trimming 35mm film straight across, cut an arc (semi circle more less) or do what I do when I got fed up with trying to make round cuts: cut straight across and then trim the corners off at 45 degrees, try to miss the perforations.
-don't force anything, ever. if it binds a bit, relax and back off the tension. Then start over - it should be ok. Frankly, since I started trimmingthe corners, I never had to do that.
One more thing, since I don't load my own, I don't re-use the cassettes, I just take a can opener to both ends of the factory cassette. Then the metal pops open and the film comes out in my hand. I trim it, load it until the spool hits my thumbs, clip, a couple more turns and I am done. A 36 exp roll should not take more than 2-3 minutes in the dark from lights out to lights back on.
Of course, if I learned on SS reels, I'd probably find them just as nice to use -bottom line is, they all work. So either find the ones that work best foryou, or take the few minutes to figure out how the ones you have like to be treated.
Best of luck - and remember: relax, this is supposed to be fun!
Peter.