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- Dec 6, 2006
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Also, from what I understand, A&O Rodinal is the same as the more modern Rodinal...but no one can be sure until they get some to test. I'm still working on my old bottle of Agfa stuff.
I hope we remain in pre WW11 times for a long time to come ;-)... pre WW11 Agfa version ...
Especially as it is the old stuff which keeps for ever-not the new versionI hope we remain in pre WW11 times for a long time to come ;-)
There is no information on the re-start of film production.
Regards
Georg
Also, from what I understand, A&O Rodinal is the same as the more modern Rodinal...but no one can be sure until they get some to test. I'm still working on my old bottle of Agfa stuff.
Especially as it is the old stuff which keeps for ever-not the new version
Oh my G*d. This topic has now been discussed a hundred times on the net, but people seem to be very resistant against real information, and prefer guessing.
So, once more: Agfa Gevaert is a different company than AgfaPhoto, and ist still alive and kicking. They still coat film like microfilm (Agfa Copex), and sometimes they seem do to special (or slightly modified) coatings for resellers like MACO (e.g. Rollei25).
Everything else sold as Agfa at the moment is old stock from the last production runs 2004/2005. Sometimes originally packaged, sometimes cut and spooled by 3rd-party companies post mortem.
The "rebirth" of Agfa paper (although under a different brand) is defintively a serious project. Sure, the "research coating machine" is smaller than the original one, but I think this is not a bad thing in the actual market. For example, regarding to information (mostly in german forums) from people involved in this project (e.g. Fotoimpex boss Mirko Boedekker), the emulsion kettle is 50 liters (compared to the old 1000 l from the sixties). A 20-fold downsizing seems reasonable.
These guys seem to have invested a lot of resources into this project, and I do not think they did this for fun. It is also very important for them economically, as they distribute papers under their own labels, but sources for paper for re-labelling are rapidly drying out.
There is no information on the re-start of film production.
Regards
Georg
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