With the specific films he mentioned, 25 and 29 have the same factor. What will differ is the distinctly different shape of the toe between these,
as well as the real-world ASA. Once you get involved in an orthopan film like ACROS, instead of true pan, all a 29 does is lop off a zone or two
in the shadows completely. ACROS just doesn't have sensitivity that far down into the red. With a 25, it requires the same 3-stop correction as
most true pan films. It makes no difference what the mfg of these filters says in any GENERIC sense. Not all films are the same. Since I ordinarily
shoot 8x10 films, often in high contrast mountain and forest settings, you can be darn sure I'm not guessing about any of this. But there is simply no substitute for correctly metering the shadows, testing in advance, and then understanding why two different films of allegedly analogous speed give very different results.