Alan Edward Klein
Member
Wouldn;t they be automatically recycled because you send the whole camera back to them for developing the film and making prints? Isn't that included in the cost of the camera?I haven't seen the new Kodak single use camera but from the photo posted, the body looks similar to the colour model.
IIRC the film is on the opposite side to the battery ( looking at the back of the camera the film is on the right and the battery on the left) and this should cut down on the likelihood of getting a shock from a fully charged capacitor.
I don't believe these cameras can be easily reloaded as you break open the film compartment (it is not hinged) and it won't reclose properly. I know Ilford had at one time a single-use and a reusable camera, two separate cameras.
Back in the late 1990s and early 2000s, single-use cameras were collected for "recycling" from labs. I think some of the "recycling" was more to stop empty single-use cameras being shipped to China to be reloaded and sealed with black tape( Fuji Ireland tried this). Other "recycling" was to collect cameras for shipping to China. I remember one independent film distributor offered, the lab, €0.05 per camera body collected