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leaving film leader out


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is there any real advantage to leaving the film leader out on 35mm cartridges if i'm having my film processed at a lab? i usually leave mine out, on the assumption that whatever little thingamabob they use to reach up in there and grab the leader poses a slight risk of scratching part of the film containing an image. but doing so slows me down in reloading the camera because i have to fold the leader back around the exposed cartridge and stick the whole thing in a canister, whereas if i just left the leader all the way in the cartridge, i could just stick it in my pocket.
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I would expect that labs remove the film by popping off the end cap

rather than pulling it out through the slit. That's how I do it in

the darkroom, and since the felt on the slit can pick up scratchy

particles, the fewer times the film passes through it, the better.

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I use one of those leader retriever thingies to pull the leader out of

the cassette so I can trim it straight and cut the tip off the corners

with the lights on, before I turn the lights off and pry the end off

for loading into a developing tank. I think the maximum distance that

the metal blades can reach is about one time around the film at the

outside of the spool, and almost all 35mm cameras lose more than this

getting to the first frame. So unless a lab uses a much longer

retriever (can't imagine why they would - the leader is at the end of

the film, and you only have to grab an inch or two to pull it out of

the light trap) there shouldn't be much risk of scratching a

worthwhile frame.

 

<p>

 

Of course, this is only theory, and a man with experience beats a man

with a theory almost every time (please, no gender neutrality flames

on this.) I do B&W almost exclusively, so have virtually no

experience with labs, but I will say that the half dozen color

negative rolls I take in a year don't seem to get scratched by the

camera store lab that I use.

 

<p>

 

Cheers,

Kip Babington

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I always leave the leader fully wound in. (1) This stops accidental

second use of the film, and (2) My <i>theory</i> (sorry, Kip) is that

it forces the processors to open the cassette, rather than rip the

film past the felt light-trap again. I really can't see a busy

processor fiddling about with a film retriever.

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