I believe he means "excellent".What does XLNT mean?
Taping to the old film is a trick for reusing commercial spools that can’t be opened without tuining them.I used and reused both metal and plastic cassettes and I have always taped directly to the plastic spool, never taped to the end of the old film.
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Good grief Charley Brown; it's B&W: process it yourself. I could understand this if it were color, but black and white???
Taping to the old film is a trick for reusing commercial spools that can’t be opened without tuining them.
There would be no reason to do it with spools that are designed for reuse.
Uhh... You kinda said it by posting this in the "B&W: Film, Paper, Chemistry" forum.Where exactly did I say it's b&w?
In any case, good topic. I'll be looking into some of these options.Uhh... You kinda said it by posting this in the "B&W: Film, Paper, Chemistry" forum.In any case, good topic. I'll be looking into some of these options.
Ok you are primarily interested in metal cassettes. That you found out ? Fine - what would you like to pay for? Max. 5 bucks or more a piece? How it would be to get it for less?To me - max. 2 bucks should be ok !But what about the idea to pay nothing ? You cut the exposed film from the end (without opening the original new brand film cassette 135-36).You develope your film - and the original cassette (let's say for example to make it more clear to each others : "The Ilford Delta100 film cassette") and then you tape your bulk film from the loader at the remaining original Delta100 film end.Sure you have to buy some films original before and have to expose it (no problem - I would say).I guess the quality is on the best level then and how often it would work ? To reload an Ilford original cassette ? Perhaps you try to find out differences to Kodak Originals....I'm primarily interested in metal cassettes, as I'm familiar with them and am fond of the snap-cap design, which has always worked well for me.
I'm always a little wary of trying something new, something with which I have no personal experience, which is why I made this thread. Of the cassettes with a decent number of reviews, I see mainly positive reviews for some of the various brands of plastic cassettes which are available through the popular photo supply websites such as b&h, and others but there is usually either a paucity of reviews, or I see the same problems being mentioned over and over even though the reviews are mostly positive. Mainly problems with unreliable caps, poorly adhered felt (quality control), difficulty in loading 36 frames worth of film, and problems with the shape and size of the cassette causing it to turn inside the camera leading to scratched film.
If you have a particular brand of plastic cassette that you prefer and know to be reliable, I would greatly appreciate your recommendation. I just haven't been able to find one myself that I feel comfortable purchasing based on the reviews or lack of reviews.


The bigger issue is that the lab is not going to know what is really in the cartridge, our policy, when I worked in a one hour lab was to refuse all bulk loads and all relabeled cartridges since all such mystery fodder could really gunk up a roller transport C-41 machine. We had folks trying to get black and white through the machine because they needed the prints in a hurry and even a roll of Kodachrome slipped through once--that was a half day of lost production, a rack scrub down, and a dump of the developer tank.I just got a rather persnickety note from a lab about taping new film to the end of the leader of a used canister. Apparently they used a dip and dunk machine, and cut the film off flush with the core. The developer loosened the tape below and my film was ruined in the tank. First time that's ever happened. Emailed the business that bulk loaded it, he says that's the first time he's ever heard a complaint. I guess I'll make sure to mention it next time when dropping off. Insult to injury they listed it as my error and charged me anyway.
......yeah this might happen. Sometimes labs today don't know what film is inside an original cassette......The bigger issue is that the lab is not going to know what is really in the cartridge, our policy, when I worked in a one hour lab was to refuse all bulk loads and all relabeled cartridges since all such mystery fodder could really gunk up a roller transport C-41 machine. We had folks trying to get black and white through the machine because they needed the prints in a hurry and even a roll of Kodachrome slipped through once--that was a half day of lost production, a rack scrub down, and a dump of the developer tank.



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