You are assuming the market stops shrinking. Even if it does stop shrinking Harman make more profit by keeping their range static, they make even more by reducing range.
You are still not getting it, LOL!
Make more by reducing range? Sorry Mr. "Systems Engineer" but I will let Simon Galley tell me how Ilford is doing, not anyone else....
The market for black and white products is not shrinking, it is steady if not growing....we are only talking black and white here, nothing else.
In the *specific* case of 400 ISO large format film, Kodak TMAX 400 sells very well, to the point that it is currently not worth it for Ilford to consider coating Delta 400 in sheet film. If TMY2 ever goes away, then that leaves a pretty big hole in the market, ISO 400 speed black and white films are immensely popular in large format due to a number of reasons, a big one being windy days and many of us like the sharper t-grain types for a lot of the work we do.
If Delta 400 becomes the only T-grain ISO 400 speed black and white film in town, sales *will* go up and make it worth it to coat LF.
I'm still getting to know Delta 400 in case TMY2 ever goes away.
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Kodak Park is making film as fast as they can at the present time and there are no plans to turn out the lights (well, in this case turn on the lights
). Alaris needs the film to fulfill the deal on the pensions and so the film is moving somewhere. It takes about 1 month to ship a container from the east coast across the US and then the Pacific on average. So, we may have to wait as the pipeline fills.