Recently I worked on a project that required some very precision specialized mechanics. My group needed to pass the knowledge to another group - all expert mechanical engineers but with no experience in the particular field we were working on. They thought they just needed the drawings and the documentation. It turned out it was far than enough. Having them create a working prototype took us many many months of couching.
But that does not make it impossible. "many months" sounds perfectly fine and reasonable to my ears. I'm an engineer myself and i'm accustomed to projects that require one or two years to release an acceptable product. The point is, precision or high tech engineering always takes time, but that doesn't make projects impossible or even unfeasible.
Now scale that to just a small factory like Ferrania, were you have thousands of specialized mechanics, electronics and software only to run the plant. No wonder they say their most precious asset are the old engineers that joined the team!
On the topic of Ferrania -- i think the Ferrania situation has been a bit misunderstood. They do not require thousands of people to run the new, small scale plant. Their team is currently of about 10 people, this includes coating operators, coating engineer, organic chemists, etc.
The reason Ferrania has taken 2 or 3 years without manufacturing film, despite having the engineers and the facilities, are of issues that are not really directly related to film making, but logistics issues:
- they had to move lots of machinery from a GIANT facility that was about to demolished to other, smaller facilities
- they had to literally clean the walls of the new facilities and clean the machinery, with only two or three people available for this task.
- their power supply was interrupted due to the government building a highway in the middle of their power and water lines
- same for the water lines
- they needed a new chilling system
and
- italian bureoucracy is slow
None of these are engineering issues directly related to coating, emulsion engineering, film base engineering or manufacturing.
My point is that if you have an interruption of the inter-human knowledge, it is very very difficult to rebuild it, even with the best documentation.
I contend that if Kodak and Fuji go bankrupt and stop production, what will naturally happen is that the engineers that loved what they did inside, now out of work, will have a natural instinct to share and thus preserve their 'tribal' knowledge via the internet.
And if nobody purchases the intellectual property assets, ALL the microfilmed and printed internal documentation will be promptly leaked into the internet, which WILL cause a stir on forums for scientific-minded people (organic chemists, for example) and thus will cause discussions of what has been found in such documentation and so on. Tribal discussion at work.
I am never implying that this then means that any chemist will quickly engineer his own C41 or E6 film "at home" with a small lab. What i mean is that this open the possibility of some enthusiasts and chemists and engineers getting together, engaging amateur photographers through social media into raising money (i.e. via a Kickstarter), and thus, with financing and a long enough timeline, manufacture film again.
In case anybody forgot this, the guys at FILM Ferrania were able to raise
USD $322,420 in only two months with support from 5,582 color film enthusiasts around the world.
I think this is worth repeating.
The guys at FILM Ferrania were able to raise
USD $322,420 in only two months with support from 5,582 color film enthusiasts around the world.