View Full Version : Airport X-Ray Machines and Videotape


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Joshua Provost
June 16th, 2005, 01:38 PM
Andzei,

Yes, this was also my experience. It did a number of video projects on a recent vacation. In all, I had 18 full tapes of footage. They were put in a suitcase that was checked luggage. I even watched them put it through the monster x-ray/bomb-detection machine. I check the tapes when I arrived home, and all of them are just fine.

Thanks,
Josh

Michael Salzlechner
June 16th, 2005, 06:05 PM
In general you shouldnt have any problems

Having said that the machines used to xray checked luggage are generally worse then the ones used to xray carryons.

Another thing you could do is to get one of these bags that are shielded. We used to use them to transport high ISO film which back then often was damaged with the old xray equipment. It is simply a bag with shielding similar to the stuff they use to shield you from xray machines at the doctor.

Andzei Matsukevits
June 16th, 2005, 06:17 PM
huh, i wish luck for myself

btw thanks guys!

Glenn Chan
June 16th, 2005, 09:21 PM
Mini-DV tape is really hard to erase magnetically. Believe me, I have a tape eraser :D

I don't think X-rays mess with mini-DV tape, which stores information magnetically.

Andzei Matsukevits
June 16th, 2005, 09:27 PM
dude, what u use tape eraser for? :D

Brett Bevelacqua
September 22nd, 2005, 12:44 PM
Curious if anyone has any experience??
I'm shooting for 2 weeks in Colorado. I am flying. I've never taken video tapes on a plane before. Will the X-ray machine screw up blank tapes(on the way out) or mini dv tapes that have video on them(on the way back).

I was thinking of shipping the tapes back home, but I'm a little nervous about the tapes being out of my sight.

Boyd Ostroff
September 22nd, 2005, 12:53 PM
I don't think you'll have any problem. I took quite a lot of them to and from Argentina this summer with no problems.

Richard Alvarez
September 22nd, 2005, 01:09 PM
Brett,

I did a test back in November. Did some scratch exposures on some tapes. Loaded blank and 'exposed' tapes into my check on AND carry on luggage. Both were Xrayed. None were 'damaged."

My personal policy at this time is to carry exposed tapes with me, just so I don't lose them. That means they are likely to be xrayed at the check through. Sure, you can ASK they don't do this. My experience is that this causes them to check more carefully.

Your mileage may vary.

Ash Greyson
September 22nd, 2005, 01:38 PM
Having travelled the globe many times over I can tell you it is not a problem at all. Have fun!



ash =o)

Jeff Wilson
September 22nd, 2005, 03:11 PM
I also travel frequently and have never had a problem with analog or digital tapes. It is possible if there is a long layover heat and humidity might harm the tapes, but I’ve experienced no problems from X-rays.

George Ellis
September 22nd, 2005, 03:39 PM
Two summers of hopping on planes about every other weekend with no issues here.

Brett Bevelacqua
September 22nd, 2005, 04:42 PM
thank you for your replies

Quoc Peyrot
September 22nd, 2005, 07:08 PM
As far as I know, X-rays are fine, but metal detectors are not.

Guest
September 22nd, 2005, 10:17 PM
You don't have to worry about xrays. You have to worry about altitude. You could get a nose bleed up here. :)

By the way... the Aspen Glow (trees turning yellow) has started. You should get some awesome footage over the next couple of weeks. Don't forget your UV filter.

Gints Klimanis
October 25th, 2005, 02:18 PM
> As far as I know, X-rays are fine, but metal detectors are not.

Should I worry about shipping videotapes via Federal Express or US Postal Service (USPS) ? The USPS offers a cheap "media mail" service and assured me that videotapes would not be harmed. But that takes so darn long - one week from San Jose to San Francisco, which is typically one day using 1st class.

Kevin Calumpit
October 26th, 2005, 01:40 PM
Yeah i have even gone as far as asking the Xray person, will this thing mess up my tapes/camera and they were like nope dont worry so sure enough everything is fine.

Gints Klimanis
October 26th, 2005, 05:29 PM
When we're told that media isn't messed up, what does that mean ? I'd rather read a report from a media manufacturer.

Also, which metal detectors should I worry about ?

Dean Young
December 24th, 2005, 06:00 AM
I recently (6Dec05-21Dec05) cruised around the Caribbean on my holidays filling 7 camcorder dv60 tapes. After each day I would review the film recorded that day, all tapes appeared fine before commencing my return journey.
At Barbados airport (which is presently being rebuilt/improved and currently in pretty poor condition) the tapes were within the checked luggage main suitcases.
Upon returning to the UK I was very dissapointed to find the tapes now appear to be corrupted. All the tapes sound is now intermitent and the video itself has vertical lines of corrupt images. Footage taken before the holiday (a year earlier) also has this problem although any new footage on the tapes does not.

Does anyone have an idea if these tapes could be fixed?

The kodak website now specifies a warning for 'motion pictures' when entering/exiting the US.
I believe the x-rays/scanning between Barbados and the UK has corrupted the tapes
(unless anyone has any other snippets of information with regard to this?)

The kodak warning can be found at:
http://www.kodak.com/US/en/motion/support/technical/xrays_airport.jhtml

Andy Graham
December 26th, 2005, 01:21 PM
Hi Dean, You could try a head cleaning tape. A simmilar thing happens to my xl1s although the corrupt bars are horizontal on mine, i run the head cleaner for 30 sec and it goes away (be carefull to only run the head cleaner for 30 sec each time and no more than twice in a row or it may damage the heads ) .Could be worth a go.

cheers Andy.

Stephan Cotton
September 3rd, 2009, 09:07 AM
Has anyone had experience with mini dv tapes being xrayed recently? I'm going to have to ship some from Berlin and Milan over the next couple weeks and notice all the posts on this thread are five years old. Any recent experience? Also, anything with shippers rather than with checked luggage? Thanks, SHC

Al Powell
September 28th, 2009, 04:24 PM
I've just come to MiniDV after 20+ years of production experience with VHS, 3/4", BetaCam and BetaSP. I've flown a number of times and checked tapes as needed, but nothing recently.

I've been reading this thread with some interest, and one of the most interesting parts to me is the comments that MiniDV tape is high enough coercivity that standard handheld tape erasers won't erase it. If true, there is NO way that airport scanners or their power supplies could cause a problem.

Consider this: every purse going past that scanner is full of credit cards. I can assure you that any magnetic field strong enough to erase a videotape would clear the data off every credit card (all of which have magnetic strips) passing near it.

As stated earlier in the thread, scanners are non-magnetic so they cannot affect videotape. Period. You could X-ray a videotape until it glowed in the dark (if such a thing were possible) without affecting the signal on the tape. If scanner power supplies - or the motors driving the scanner belt - were powerful enough to affect videotape, they would also be scrambling any other magnetic medium passing by, including credit cards. Also, they would probably damage watches in trays that passed by.

I'm not buying stories of negative effects on videotape from airport scanners.