This is awesome:
It is Heart-Warming to see that Kodak.....ANY film producer..... is still practicing the "Dark-Art"![]()
I think it's safe to say they're at the Dark Science level at this point.
Although it does amuse me that the most critical part of their film production line relies on a guy with a piece of acrylic and a wooden pencil.
Not that surprising. My friend worked in health sciences at Grand Gulf nuclear plant in Port Gibson, Mississippi. His machines used DEC Alpha 64-bit computers to analyze radiation and other parameters. They bought spare circuit boards via eBay. He thought other parts of the power plant were also operated with VAX/VMS, but the upgrades in 2020-2021 may have updated all these systems.I heard the mention of Ebay for the occasional weird part![]()
It would be interesting to know utilization of the coaters? 24/7 ? It's a miracle that Kodak has been able to maintain such an operation.
I heard the mention of Ebay for the occasional weird part![]()
and if it is "off" in some way, it gets sent for silver recovery.What I found so interesting is how many 24 exposure rolls they get per one of those master rolls. 60,000 rolls! That means each master roll they run is ~$300,000+ or more worth of finished rolls at wholesale. Basically, every time they do one of those runs that's not a small chunk of cash.
That was my thoght a few hours after watching. seems they gave him a tour on the coating on Thursday where tow batches of ektar and Portra 800 were bibg run Next day everythig was shut down except some trolleys were waiting for Monday to make some industrial films..It appears that if there was still a market these folks could increase output by a staggering amount. How suppliers, distribution etc etc could keep up is another thing entirely.
That was my thoght a few hours after watching. seems they gave him a tour on the coating on Thursday where tow batches of ektar and Portra 800 were bibg run Next day everythig was shut down except some trolleys were waiting for Monday to make some industrial films..
that facility was was a 24/7 operation evn in Robert "Laser's" book. NOW the key may be to realise that it was built for Movie film, and the market for 2383/3383 is posibly 0.1% of what that setup was designed for. (data on 2383/3383 if you don't know what I am refering to : https://www.kodak.com/en/motion/product/post/print-films/vision-color-2383-3383 )
The Silver curtain has come down for two reasons:
1) they are just about the only remaining manufacturer making colour film in industrial sized quantities - in essence, there are no meaningful competitors; and
2) more than anything else, they are trying to attract new, young talent to build their skilled and highly knowledgeable specialist workplace.
These videos are essentially recruiting videos.
Ioften wonder if 2302/3302/5302/7302 (Eastman fine Grain release positive film) which is a slow blue sensitive B&W film is that much different from what was offered in the 1800s except for much better consistency. (although FG Positive is only intended for contact printing)I understood the 1st step of making a silver bromide emulsion, 35+ years ago I made a decent AgBr emulsion went through all the ripening, chilling washing etc. That got me to the state of amateur emulsion making in the 1880's![]()
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