This is topic Polyester & Vinegar Syndrome.? in forum 16mm Forum at 8mm Forum.


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Posted by Maurice Leakey (Member # 916) on June 22, 2018, 05:12 AM:
 
Here's an interesting situation for your thoughts and comments.

About a month ago I bought a 3-reel MGM black & white feature and on opening the package there was a smell of the notorious vinegar syndrome. The cardboard box had quite a strong smell, but the three plastic Tuscan spools only had a slight trace of the smell.

The film was on Eastman 4b with a date code of 1966. Upon holding up to the light I could see my hand through the film. This would indicate that the film was on polyester stock. But it seems well known that this stock does not catch V.S.

After four weeks of the box being daily in the sun, and the three spools sitting on my settee, the smell has disappeared.

I read that cardboard boxes can absorb the smell. Perhaps the film in its box had been kept alongside a film which did have V.S. This might explain the circumstances.

What are your views on my thoughts?
 
Posted by Robert Crewdson (Member # 3790) on June 22, 2018, 06:50 AM:
 
According to information here; 4B was not a filmstock
http://www.paulivester.com/films/filmstock/guide.htm
http://www.film-tech.com/ubb/f1/t002835.html

Was Polyester in use in 1966?; I have a feature which is also marked Eastman 4B and dated 1982, and this is acetate and faded.
 
Posted by Maurice Leakey (Member # 916) on June 22, 2018, 09:36 AM:
 
I understand that the 4b is, as you say, not a film stock per se, but possibly some kind of slitting code such as used by Agfa.

Irrespective of the date code, which perhaps has been printed through when the print was prepared for TV use, on the evidence provided (see through) it seems to mean that it is polyester.

The main point I made is can polyester be affected by V.S.?
 
Posted by Kevin Clark (Member # 211) on June 22, 2018, 06:04 PM:
 
Hello Maurice

It must be just a smell left over from the reels or boxes previously being used to store an acetate VS print - any polyester stock cannot have VS simply because it does not have any of the VS chemical components of acetate in its make up.

Are you 100% sure it is not acetate though? - most poly prints were made from the late 80's onwards - the 'tear test' is better to try on the leader or tail to determine the film base.

If you fancy a longer read about film bases please see here:

https://www.nfsa.gov.au/preservation/guide/handbook/base-polymers

Kevin
 
Posted by Nantawat Kittiwarakul (Member # 6050) on June 22, 2018, 07:48 PM:
 
The ultimate test to see if it is really poly,is to try cement splicing on it. Poly film won't cement-splice,never. [Wink]
 
Posted by Maurice Leakey (Member # 916) on June 23, 2018, 03:34 AM:
 
I am basing my thoughts on the "hand" test.
When held sideways to the light the film is quite translucent and I can see my hand through it.
This seems to be a definitive polyester test.
 
Posted by Mark Todd (Member # 96) on June 23, 2018, 04:08 AM:
 
Hi Maurice there is some B+W acetate stock that is very see through if you will, its caught me ( or sellers to me) out many times as I only buy poly prints with my ocd etc.

Can you get to a piece at the end of the reel etc of actual film and try the tear test kevin mentions.

Sometimes takes a good tight grip effort to tear across but acetate will tear, poly will not, its the 100% way to tell.

1966 stock is very unlikely to be poly, there are B+W prints about from the 70`s, but mainly as Kevin says 80`s.

Best Mark.

PS you can also quite often tell poly look but actually acetate prints out with the bit of acetate warp or curl etc.

Does it have any ?

You`d be surprised at how many people will tell you they know everything about film but don`t know how to tell if poly or acetate stock.You do get a knack for it.

I`ve actually once had a new sealed super 8 poly print did have some sort of degradation type sticky curly issue, not VS but something odd.
 
Posted by Michael O'Regan (Member # 938) on June 23, 2018, 05:36 AM:
 
I guess if the smell has now disappeared, it must have been the box or the reels.
 
Posted by Robert Crewdson (Member # 3790) on June 23, 2018, 06:23 AM:
 
I bought two rolls of Polyester white leader from Grahame Newnham; I wanted acetate, but he was out of stock at that time. Strange thing is, I can tear this easily. it's not mislabelled, as it's completely different from the acetate rolls I had from him before. Never tried the test on a piece of clear film.
 
Posted by Kevin Clark (Member # 211) on June 23, 2018, 07:15 AM:
 
If you can tear it by hand that is a very odd type of poly leader film that Grahame is selling Robert.

Regarding the 'hand showing through' theory I once nearly listed a 16mm print of County Hospital for sale to Mark as poly because it looked almost transparent side - on but it then tore with little force when I checked the tail clear film section so was definitely acetate.

A non-destructive method to tell Polyester (Estar, etc.) from Acetate is defined in detail in Paul Ivester's excellent Film Stocks webpages:

http://www.paulivester.com/films/filmstock/guide.htm

Scroll down nearly to the bottom of the page and all will be revealed.

Kevin
 
Posted by Robert Crewdson (Member # 3790) on June 23, 2018, 08:24 AM:
 
Hi Kevin; I tried again before I posted, and tore a 4 inch piece into 4 pieces. The old Acetate leader was similar to film, with what looks like a base side and an emulsion side, but the polyester leader is the same both sides, a sot of eggshell finish. i only wanted acetate to go with the acetate film as I was using cement splices, but now I'm only using tape regardless of film base.

Would like to see the hand behind the polyester film effect if anyone can post a picture. I have one or two clear films, but
these are acetate.
 
Posted by Kevin Clark (Member # 211) on June 23, 2018, 09:39 AM:
 
Hello Robert

Could you please try a splice or two on the leader from Grahame using your cement splicer - if the leader can be cement spliced it must be acetate base with no emulsion - just guessing the emulsion bit as that would explain two smooth shiny sides rather than one dull emulsion side.

This reminds me of some super 8 leaders that did the rounds in the 70's / 80's - white, red and green were available I think made by Arrow - neither poly or acetate but a different plastic polymer altogether - if you get a film with the leader so badly sideways curled whilst the rest of the film is OK then it is usually this Arrow stuff.

I wonder if Grahame's supplier was able to slit and perforate a similar 'brand x' plastic - if it tape splices and feeds OK I guess there is no problem it is still doing the job of protecting the main film during threading and exit.

Kevin
 
Posted by Robert Crewdson (Member # 3790) on June 23, 2018, 10:31 AM:
 
I'll try that Kevin and report back, probably tomorrow.
 
Posted by Daniel D. Teoli Jr. (Member # 6043) on June 23, 2018, 08:16 PM:
 
So was poly film always tape spliced? I would think that would be unprofessional for feature films.
 
Posted by David Ollerearnshaw (Member # 3296) on June 23, 2018, 09:26 PM:
 
If you were very rich you could splice polyester using an ultrasonic splicer. One was reviewed in Super 8 Film Maker (the US magazine). Price I think $600. I used tape.
 
Posted by Robert Crewdson (Member # 3790) on June 24, 2018, 04:10 AM:
 
I tried using cement on this leader and it made no impression at all, so not acetate. As you can see from the photo, the bag is clearly marked Poly. It tears as easily as acetate, and you can see from the 2nd photo that it was torn and not cut.
 -
 -
 
Posted by Greg Perry (Member # 5177) on June 24, 2018, 07:42 AM:
 
Robert,
I wonder if your leader might be the 16mm Fiesta plastic leader. This often came in bright colors (I think I had blue and green), not sure about white.

It is junk which warps and twists horribly in very little time. I threw mine out as I had to begin replacing it with the good Mylar stuff which Larry sells. It was sold on ebay as poly, but of course it is not truly polyester (Estar) or Mylar.
 
Posted by Robert Crewdson (Member # 3790) on June 24, 2018, 08:42 AM:
 
This is quite thick; I have had coloured leader that sometimes is so thin it has a job with the auto threading. I'm OK with this leader;all my features are acetate. I've read several times that poly is so tough that it would break the teeth on the sprocket wheels before the film would break, so not looking for something that tough.
 
Posted by Greg Perry (Member # 5177) on June 24, 2018, 09:18 AM:
 
So long as it works for your needs! And your leader does look just fine. I think the Fiesta stuff is very shiny. I have also ran into the very thin and limp leader you mention. I generally put new leader on both head and tail on the 16mm films I get. Seems more often than not existing leader is in bad shape or non-existent.
 
Posted by Robert Crewdson (Member # 3790) on June 24, 2018, 02:37 PM:
 
I do that as well Greg, to protect the original leader.
 
Posted by Tom Photiou (Member # 130) on June 24, 2018, 04:14 PM:
 
very slightly off subject, but i recently bought a 50ft roll of super 8 white polyester leader. It is poly and i cant tear it but it will not thread through any our our Elmo 1200HD.s, i then went to the CIR splicer and when i laid it across the base i realised if i fix two or three of the sprocket holes over the points the others dont line up. The perforations are wrong. No choice but to bin it and avoid buying any-more on ebay. The seller had excellent feedback and had, (allegedly), sold a lot of these.
 


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