kraker
i wondered if the thick base would mess with the clutch / wind mechanism of the MF cameras
being thicker and more tension ( being someone who rolls his own paper negatives i know it can be tricky )
but they told me they used it in a variety of cameras from holgas to hassys ... and no trouble.
roger i realize ( you and ? ) a handful of people have a gripe with galaxy because of what they call their paper/process.
this thread was not meant to stir the pot. in the kickstarter ad they describe the process step by step. develop, bleach fog redevelop, nothing's a secret.
with regards to your "what's the point" --- is the same point of the washi paper sold in france, it is sold in sheets, 120 rolls and 135 canisters.
the difference is the washipaper is about iso 1, this is 5+ stops faster if you use their chemistry &c. its the same point of people
who dont' want to use film but would rather shoot paper negatives and don't want to deal with rolling it themselves.
i think it is great that there is another pre-packaged-way to do reversals, and a system that works without hunting down chemicals and doing a prayer.
i've spent a lot of time and effort and emulsion and chemistry tweaking my own reversal developer, and tried
to do a non-dichromate one as well. there aren't many reveral kits / known quantities .. and whether they call it a 2 step reversal or
the kodak terminology -direct positive - either way this is great,
a lot of people have trouble with the formulary kits for film, and that the tmax reversal kit ( it mimics ) isn't sold anymore
the rockland tintype reversal kits are proprietary ... i really can't see a problem.