I think you will find among my posts the comment that K25 could not be coated on the new machine. It is very difficult to coat the entire family. I also surmised that Kodak did market research for Kodachrome when they did the Ektachrome work. And to finish things off, Kodak had an agresive advertising program for Kodachrome until about 1990 when sales fell below realistically sustainable manufacture. Then it was kept on mainly for nostalgia for people like APUG members who loved it. But it finally could not be sustained.
I guess you don't read my posts and those of others who know what is what.
PE
Yes I do read your posts.
Sorry if you misunderstand me at times, but I was not referring to K25.
I was purely referring to the last time Kodachrome was made (K64) which was coated in B38 as you agree.
As far as market research goes, yes perhaps they did recently. But i have not seen any surveys on their facebook page or in any other media asking photographers what they would want to shoot, what price you would be happy to pay for a film if it was reintroduced, etc.
If it was me, I would be wanting to grab data from a wide audience, they could even be posting on here like other film manufacturers do.
Social media is very powerful and they could really tap into that heavily if they wanted to.
Yes marketing may have been strong in the 90's when film was at its peak, but why not change tactics and market Kodachrome as a nice product for nostalgia?
Many had completley forgotten about it, and I at the time knew very little about it. I only shot super8 and never realised how complex it was to process.
I simply thought that because it was motion picture film, it needed a special lab to handle it. I was very young at the time when I last put my super8 camera down.