What a party pooper! 




When/where does film go on sale? I've seen the "short dated" stuff here and there, and it wasn't even enough of a sale to offset sales tax.
To anyone seriously interested in storing Delta 3200 for an extended period, note that there are two fog inducers one must avoid. The first is cosmic radiation, and the second is radiation from local sources like granite. Note Larry Gebhardt's location: NH. That's New Hampshire, "The Granite State." Homes there typically include a radon mitigation system to get rid of radioactive gas coming from the granite-rich ground they're built on.
Lead shielding will do nothing to prevent cosmic radiation-induced fogging. Substantial quantities of earth/soil can sufficiently attenuate that radiation, but then one is faced with avoiding granite. The optimum storage location, one Kodak is reputed to have used for TMAX 3200 master rolls (I've not been able to confirm that; perhaps PHOTRIO member laser can), is an abandoned salt mine. Space in one of those in Kansas is available for rent here:
Underground Storage - UV&S Inc.
uvsinc.com
On the other hand, it's probably less expensive to just keep buying fresh Delta 3200.![]()
Ah so no point in a lead-lined box then? As a matter of fact there is a salt mine quite close to Ilford in Cheshire. Maybe Ilford uses part of it as does Kodak for its TMax 3200?
Do you know what it is about a saltmine that makes it an optimum storage for presumably all film but especially fast film?
Thanks
pentaxuser
Salt mines can be relatively deep, and relatively free from radiation sources.

Salt mines can be relatively deep, and relatively free from radiation sources.

That sounds particularly disgusting, actually. It'd make more sense to wash an apple fritter down with a cider.
No, it should be salt, since salt is a preservative.![]()

Ah so no point in a lead-lined box then? As a matter of fact there is a salt mine quite close to Ilford in Cheshire. Maybe Ilford uses part of it as does Kodak for its TMax 3200?
Do you know what it is about a saltmine that makes it an optimum storage for presumably all film but especially fast film?
Thanks
pentaxuser
...Do you know what it is about a saltmine that makes it an optimum storage for presumably all film but especially fast film?...
Salt mines can be relatively deep, and relatively free from radiation sources.
Also, ideal temperatures and very low humidity, between 40% and 50%![]()
I will take this all with more than a grain of salt, although I only use salt for baking when it is need for a chemical reaction.

Plus silver salts, for film photography and darkroom prints![]()

That doesn’t seem right, because at Ilford in Essex the company already had Greenwich and Ipswich close at hand before they moved production to Cheshire. Although both of those places are waterfront towns where salt could conceivably have been imported or extracted from seawater, salt mines are not an Essex thing for geological reasons. According to English Heritage, the Anglo-Saxon ‘wic’ place-name ending usually means a farm or dairy farm. Sorry to pick on an incidental point, but this thread will probably have a long internet life.Towns whose names end in ‘wich’ in England are typically associated with salt production and there are 3 nearby to Ilford’s Mobberly location.
That doesn’t seem right, because at Ilford in Essex the company already had Greenwich and Ipswich close at hand before they moved production to Cheshire. Although both of those places are waterfront towns where salt could conceivably have been imported or extracted from seawater, salt mines are not an Essex thing for geological reasons. According to English Heritage, the Anglo-Saxon ‘wic’ place-name ending usually means a farm or dairy farm. Sorry to pick on an incidental point, but this thread will probably have a long internet life.
was in fact a Johnson exposure meter device that Peter Sellers borrowed from a cameraman on the set? That doesn’t seem right, because at Ilford in Essex the company already had Greenwich and Ipswich close at hand before they moved production to Cheshire. Although both of those places are waterfront towns where salt could conceivably have been imported or extracted from seawater, salt mines are not an Essex thing for geological reasons. According to English Heritage, the Anglo-Saxon ‘wic’ place-name ending usually means a farm or dairy farm. Sorry to pick on an incidental point, but this thread will probably have a long internet life.
I’m well aware of the origin of the name ending ‘wich’ and I am very familiar with the 3 ‘wich s’ of Cheshire having lived in that country for a considerable amount of time in my younger days.

Me too, I was familiar with several wich's of Cheshire in my younger days. I even married one of them. When mine wiggles her nose however nothing more exciting than a sneeze can be expected
pentaxuser
Poor fellow, clearly bewiched.
I've literally paid 4,90 euro for a roll of HP5 120 2/3 years ago, it's 7,50 now. Enjoy!Damn seeing old prices hurts QQ
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