
Originally Posted by
JDNSW
You're probably thinking of celluloid film rather than projectors. I'm not quite sure how easy it would be to make a projector out of celluloid!
None of the chemicals used for processing film would have been flammable, and even if the film was (probably not), it would be hard to ignite from a cigarette when wet from processing. Paper for prints would burn, but offices using paper mostly survived for a more than a hundred years with a fag hanging out of every mouth.
Flammable chemicals seem to have mostly stopped being used in photographic processing in the third quarter of the nineteenth century.
Yes, I meant celluloid film for projectors. I suspect most paper fires in offices were due to people dropping still lit cigarettes into wastepaper baskets. I have actually seen a waste skip catch fire for a similar reason, and even when the flames were out it continued to smoulder, so we had to fill it with water and then drill a hole in the bottom to let it all drain.
2005 D3 TDV6 Present
1999 D2 TD5 Gone
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