Ken Nadvornick
Member
The pilot coater at Film Ferrania is much bigger in comparison: Small production runs are possible. This machine was used in the past not only for research and testing, but also for market tests, when limited runs were given to selected photographers to test films under daily shooting conditions.
The common sense assumption is that the remaining large-scale coating machines are long-term dinosaurs, with many now taking their final breaths. But your post piques my curiosity.
If suitable residual markets for film could hypothetically be demonstrated, what sort of costs would be involved in creating new right-sized coating machines similar to what you describe above, but purpose-built instead of repurposed? Not that I expect anyone to do it. I'm just curious about the hypothetical costs involved.
The big boys were enormously expensive, both to create and to maintain. No one will ever do that again. But are the little guys also undoable ever again? Meaning, are we now stuck with only the final existing collection of old repurposed R&D machines, and headed eventually for an Efke-style end game where things just wear down and break for good?
Or alternatively, maybe a future where film companies outsource all of their coating to third-party dedicated coating companies, whose machines also service many coating-related industries other than film?
Ken