CHS 100 II is positioned in price alongside the films of the competition and being inbetween the others. Without tax a roll is offered for
5,83 EUR´s. We can´t really be cheaper than this.
About the poured emulsions we can state that Foma is not using this kind of technique since many decades. They are
the most modern film manufacturer from all eastern manufacturers. In 1991 they introduced tabular grain films (Fomapan T200 and T800) made acording to the Kodak patents using double Jet precipitation directly into the impeller (similar to Kodak). This is state of the art.
Later these were renamed in "just" 200 and 800 because of a trademark conflict with Kodak in the US.
Efke films were the ones made acording to the old ADOX recipes with some kind of a "gravity controlled pouring" until the end. Apart from other things this is what put the lid on them. Customers were not willing to pay the extra silver costs their emulsions needed (about double the silver compared to Foma) because of their overall struggles to maintain quality consitant. Shortly before they fell apart we set up ADOX finishing with the main target to after inspect on efke´s quality even deeper than we already did and thus get it up to charge the necessary prices to sustain them. Sadly this never happened.
On a side note you do not need a poured emulsion (Kippemulsion). With any modern emulsion making method you can replicate a "Kippemulsion" if you want. There are many good reasons why no one does it like this any longer.
You need a film which suits your vision. If you liked the old efke/CHS type I than CHS type II is the closest match but there are other fine films out there as well.