Re: Photographing Egypt

2006-05-14 Thread Kenneth Waller
I can't speak about international air travel, but I've traveled extensively 
by air in the U.S. for the last 18 years with the following observations -
The less hassle you cause at security, the easier the process for the 
traveler. Asking for hand checking will sometimes cause additional hassles. 
Lead film pouches will sometimes cause hassles (at least, you'll probably be 
asked to empty the pouch to show the contents).


What I've done on all my air trips when I'm carrying film (about 95% of my 
air travel) is I remove the film cassettes from the plastic containers, 
repack in clear zip lock bags  carry it in my carry on luggage.


Requests for hand checking have met with mixed results from we don't do 
that here to wait, I'll get my supervisor to do that  to sure no problem.


Kenneth Waller

- Original Message - 
From: Adam McKenty [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Subject: Photographing Egypt



Hi Folks,
I'm going to Egypt in a few days, and -- since I haven't been quite 
convinced to switch to digital -- I have some questions about film and 
such. First, what is the current situation with airport x-rays? I had 
heard that any film below about 800 would be fine, but a NG guide I 
recently looked at said today's carry-on baggage zappers are so powerful 
they'll cook film of any speed. Other options are to have the film hand 
inspected, or buy it when I get there. Does anyone have first hand 
experience of this? Are most airports willing to hand-inspect film? Does 
anyone have a favourite Cairene photography store that sells 100 asa slide 
film?


Any other advice about film for a trip like this or general tips on 
traveling with cameras would be welcome too.


Thanks,
Adam





Re: Photographing Egypt

2006-05-13 Thread Paul Stenquist
it It's the check-in luggage scanners that are powerful, not the 
carry-on. Carry-on seems to be okay for films below ISO 800. However, 
when I shot film, I almost always carried all of it  in a lead bag. 
When it showed up as a shield on the scanner, the airport folks hand 
checked it. Always worked for me.

Paul
On May 13, 2006, at 5:54 PM, Adam McKenty wrote:


Hi Folks,
I'm going to Egypt in a few days, and -- since I haven't been quite 
convinced to switch to digital -- I have some questions about film and 
such. First, what is the current situation with airport x-rays? I had 
heard that any film below about 800 would be fine, but a NG guide I 
recently looked at said today's carry-on baggage zappers are so 
powerful they'll cook film of any speed. Other options are to have the 
film hand inspected, or buy it when I get there. Does anyone have 
first hand experience of this? Are most airports willing to 
hand-inspect film? Does anyone have a favourite Cairene photography 
store that sells 100 asa slide film?


Any other advice about film for a trip like this or general tips on 
traveling with cameras would be welcome too.


Thanks,
Adam





Re: Photographing Egypt

2006-05-13 Thread Paul Stenquist


On May 13, 2006, at 5:54 PM, Adam McKenty wrote:


Hi Folks,
I'm going to Egypt in a few days, and -- since I haven't been quite 
convinced to switch to digital -- I have some questions about film and 
such. First, what is the current situation with airport x-rays? I had 
heard that any film below about 800 would be fine, but a NG guide I 
recently looked at said today's carry-on baggage zappers are so 
powerful they'll cook film of any speed. Other options are to have the 
film hand inspected, or buy it when I get there. Does anyone have 
first hand experience of this? Are most airports willing to 
hand-inspect film? Does anyone have a favourite Cairene photography 
store that sells 100 asa slide film?


Any other advice about film for a trip like this or general tips on 
traveling with cameras would be welcome too.


Thanks,
Adam





Re: Photographing Egypt

2006-05-13 Thread japilado
I recently traveled to Italy.  I took along 3 rolls of ISO 100 slide film
(shot mainly digital, but wanted slides, too) that were scanned several
times at certain museums, and, of course at airports.  I kept the film in
my camera bag that I had with me all of the time.   The slides looked
normal after I processed it.

Jim A.





 Hi Folks,
 I'm going to Egypt in a few days, and -- since I haven't been quite
 convinced to switch to digital -- I have some questions about film and
 such. First, what is the current situation with airport x-rays? I had
 heard that any film below about 800 would be fine, but a NG guide I
 recently looked at said today's carry-on baggage zappers are so powerful
 they'll cook film of any speed. Other options are to have the film hand
 inspected, or buy it when I get there. Does anyone have first hand
 experience of this? Are most airports willing to hand-inspect film? Does
 anyone have a favourite Cairene photography store that sells 100 asa
 slide film?

 Any other advice about film for a trip like this or general tips on
 traveling with cameras would be welcome too.

 Thanks,
 Adam






Re: Photographing Egypt

2006-05-13 Thread Aaron Reynolds
Most will now empty out your lead bag and run the film through the scanner -- 
the lead bag makes you look suspicious.

Carry your film out of the boxes and out of the plastic tubs, in a clear bag.  
Bring it as carry-on -- checked film WILL be ruined.  Ask for hand inspection 
but don't press for it.  If you don't get it, don't panic, just run it through 
the machine.  It'll be fine.

If you're really concerned, have it processed before you return.  I did this in 
Prague with my higher ISO films and everything turned out fine.

I did have to repeatedly explain to a security guard that 3200 was a higher 
number than 1000 (their 'safe' threshold for the carry-on scanner) on a trip to 
North Carolina, and even then they were reluctant to hand inspect it (HIM: It's 
only a little higher, it'll be okay.  ME: Um, 3200 is more than triple 1000, 
not a small amount at all.)

-Aaron

-Original Message-

From:  Paul Stenquist [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subj:  Re: Photographing Egypt
Date:  Sat May 13, 2006 6:03 pm
Size:  1K
To:  pentax-discuss@pdml.net

it It's the check-in luggage scanners that are powerful, not the 
carry-on. Carry-on seems to be okay for films below ISO 800. However, 
when I shot film, I almost always carried all of it  in a lead bag. 
When it showed up as a shield on the scanner, the airport folks hand 
checked it. Always worked for me.
Paul
On May 13, 2006, at 5:54 PM, Adam McKenty wrote:

 Hi Folks,
 I'm going to Egypt in a few days, and -- since I haven't been quite 
 convinced to switch to digital -- I have some questions about film and 
 such. First, what is the current situation with airport x-rays? I had 
 heard that any film below about 800 would be fine, but a NG guide I 
 recently looked at said today's carry-on baggage zappers are so 
 powerful they'll cook film of any speed. Other options are to have the 
 film hand inspected, or buy it when I get there. Does anyone have 
 first hand experience of this? Are most airports willing to 
 hand-inspect film? Does anyone have a favourite Cairene photography 
 store that sells 100 asa slide film?

 Any other advice about film for a trip like this or general tips on 
 traveling with cameras would be welcome too.

 Thanks,
 Adam




Re: Photographing Egypt

2006-05-13 Thread Paul Stenquist
I disagree. Once the lead bag has gone through the scanner, they don't 
run the film through again. Has never happened to me in more than 50 
flights wince 9/11. It almost ensures that you'll get a hand check.

Paul
On May 13, 2006, at 7:20 PM, Aaron Reynolds wrote:
 a
Most will now empty out your lead bag and run the film through the 
scanner -- the lead bag makes you look suspicious.


Carry your film out of the boxes and out of the plastic tubs, in a 
clear bag.  Bring it as carry-on -- checked film WILL be ruined.  Ask 
for hand inspection but don't press for it.  If you don't get it, 
don't panic, just run it through the machine.  It'll be fine.


If you're really concerned, have it processed before you return.  I 
did this in Prague with my higher ISO films and everything turned out 
fine.


I did have to repeatedly explain to a security guard that 3200 was a 
higher number than 1000 (their 'safe' threshold for the carry-on 
scanner) on a trip to North Carolina, and even then they were 
reluctant to hand inspect it (HIM: It's only a little higher, it'll be 
okay.  ME: Um, 3200 is more than triple 1000, not a small amount at 
all.)


-Aaron

-Original Message-

From:  Paul Stenquist [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subj:  Re: Photographing Egypt
Date:  Sat May 13, 2006 6:03 pm
Size:  1K
To:  pentax-discuss@pdml.net

it It's the check-in luggage scanners that are powerful, not the
carry-on. Carry-on seems to be okay for films below ISO 800. However,
when I shot film, I almost always carried all of it  in a lead bag.
When it showed up as a shield on the scanner, the airport folks hand
checked it. Always worked for me.
Paul
On May 13, 2006, at 5:54 PM, Adam McKenty wrote:


Hi Folks,
I'm going to Egypt in a few days, and -- since I haven't been quite
convinced to switch to digital -- I have some questions about film and
such. First, what is the current situation with airport x-rays? I had
heard that any film below about 800 would be fine, but a NG guide I
recently looked at said today's carry-on baggage zappers are so
powerful they'll cook film of any speed. Other options are to have the
film hand inspected, or buy it when I get there. Does anyone have
first hand experience of this? Are most airports willing to
hand-inspect film? Does anyone have a favourite Cairene photography
store that sells 100 asa slide film?

Any other advice about film for a trip like this or general tips on
traveling with cameras would be welcome too.

Thanks,
Adam







Re: Photographing Egypt

2006-05-13 Thread John Francis

The World Is A Very Big Place (TM).

In the USA, you are entitled to a hand check, if you ask.
They'll try and assure you the scanners are OK for film
slower than ISO 800, but you don't have to let them scan it.
Of course this may well lead to you spending an extra 30
minutes being thoroughly checked out - allow plenty of time.

In other parts of the world (such as, for example, Europe)
there is no such entitlement.  I'd recommend packing at least
one roll of high-speed film (I used Fuji 1600) in with all
the other rolls - that way you'll usually avoid the scanners.

I once made the mistake of leaving some 1600-speed film in my
checked baggage.  Rather to my surprise, there was no damage.
But I wouldn't recommend the practice - the X-ray machines can
be set to several different levels - presumably the machine
was on low when my bags were scanned, and the inspectors saw
nothing suspicious enough to warrant a re-scan at higher levels.





On Sat, May 13, 2006 at 07:32:51PM -0400, Paul Stenquist wrote:
 I disagree. Once the lead bag has gone through the scanner, they don't 
 run the film through again. Has never happened to me in more than 50 
 flights wince 9/11. It almost ensures that you'll get a hand check.
 Paul
 On May 13, 2006, at 7:20 PM, Aaron Reynolds wrote:
  a
 Most will now empty out your lead bag and run the film through the 
 scanner -- the lead bag makes you look suspicious.
 
 Carry your film out of the boxes and out of the plastic tubs, in a 
 clear bag.  Bring it as carry-on -- checked film WILL be ruined.  Ask 
 for hand inspection but don't press for it.  If you don't get it, 
 don't panic, just run it through the machine.  It'll be fine.
 
 If you're really concerned, have it processed before you return.  I 
 did this in Prague with my higher ISO films and everything turned out 
 fine.
 
 I did have to repeatedly explain to a security guard that 3200 was a 
 higher number than 1000 (their 'safe' threshold for the carry-on 
 scanner) on a trip to North Carolina, and even then they were 
 reluctant to hand inspect it (HIM: It's only a little higher, it'll be 
 okay.  ME: Um, 3200 is more than triple 1000, not a small amount at 
 all.)
 
 -Aaron
 
 -Original Message-
 
 From:  Paul Stenquist [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subj:  Re: Photographing Egypt
 Date:  Sat May 13, 2006 6:03 pm
 Size:  1K
 To:  pentax-discuss@pdml.net
 
 it It's the check-in luggage scanners that are powerful, not the
 carry-on. Carry-on seems to be okay for films below ISO 800. However,
 when I shot film, I almost always carried all of it  in a lead bag.
 When it showed up as a shield on the scanner, the airport folks hand
 checked it. Always worked for me.
 Paul
 On May 13, 2006, at 5:54 PM, Adam McKenty wrote:
 
 Hi Folks,
 I'm going to Egypt in a few days, and -- since I haven't been quite
 convinced to switch to digital -- I have some questions about film and
 such. First, what is the current situation with airport x-rays? I had
 heard that any film below about 800 would be fine, but a NG guide I
 recently looked at said today's carry-on baggage zappers are so
 powerful they'll cook film of any speed. Other options are to have the
 film hand inspected, or buy it when I get there. Does anyone have
 first hand experience of this? Are most airports willing to
 hand-inspect film? Does anyone have a favourite Cairene photography
 store that sells 100 asa slide film?
 
 Any other advice about film for a trip like this or general tips on
 traveling with cameras would be welcome too.
 
 Thanks,
 Adam