Sirius Glass
Subscriber
If you accept Lucky's flaws (anti-halation coating, weak tape in 120 as already mentioned), the major issue ...
Hey, I got divorced, so I do not have to accept flaws.
Unless that is what you'all walk on!
Steve
If you accept Lucky's flaws (anti-halation coating, weak tape in 120 as already mentioned), the major issue ...
Well, if it was more then a couple of years ago, there was Konica, who had their own film and paper manufacturing, we saw their colour stuff in Canada, not sure about B&W or what happened to the facility after they sold out to Sony. I used their film occasionally and it definitely wasn't re-badged Fuji either.
On the 120 I have 3 of 9 rolls the paper backing and the film separated. I have the 10th roll in the fridge and I'm afraid to use it. I'm not a seasoned pro but no issue with Kodak film. I won't be using again.
If you accept Lucky's flaws (anti-halation coating, weak tape in 120 as already mentioned), the major issue ...
The film and packaging in question couldn't be anything but Chinese. Just the finish work on the paper packaging alone... a Japanese company would committed collective suicide over it.
In that case....
Back to the topic at hand, I see enough cheap Chinese made junk every day, they will be issuing an extreme cold weather alert in Hell before any Chinese made film sees the inside of any of my cameras.
TMY-2 is fantastic stuff. First time I developed a roll of the stuff, I was sold and I didn't even shoot it. A friend of mine picked up a few rolls and shot them in a Pentax 645 on the streets of midtown Manhattan. Now, anyone who's got any powers of observation and has ever been here on a sunny day will tell you that the contrast range of a scene can be completely off the hook.
I can't tell you if it was Mandarin, but it wasn't film from Fuji, and that pretty much narrows it down to China, unless the North Koreans have a film coating facility tucked away under a missile bunker.![]()
It might have been ERA or Shanghai. I've seen 4x5 sheet film from one or the other of these brands. I've used 35 mm roll film from both these companies and trust me, they were a lot better.
Oh, I know... I messed up some shots in summer in Manhattan with Tmax 100. Tri-X was much better.
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As for the quality of chinese products, I wouldn't be so quick to condemn them especially since a lot, if not most of the bona fide, official products Westerns use by big name brands are constructed in mainland China or Taiwan and in some cases even designed there. There is a lot of production of good quality and bad quality copies (yes, there is such thing as good quality copy), a tradition in all the places in the world where copyright and copyright enforcement is very loose, especially of products by non native companies.
For example, the vast majority of bicycle frames is constructed in China. Almost all (with some notable exceptions) of cutting edge, high tech carbon fiber components are made and often designed in China, because they are in possession of the best technology, the largest factories and the know-how. It just happens that it isn't the Germans, the Japanese or the Americans that are the top in everything technologically and manufacturing wise.
The film and packaging in question couldn't be anything but Chinese. Just the finish work on the paper packaging alone... a Japanese company would committed collective suicide over it.
I'd agree with that, I only have to look around my own house to see how many products are now Made in China...top-end hi-fi, DVD player,microwave, clothes (big-name brand), high quality art books, etc.
China has been able to set up, from scratch, state-of-the-art factories able to manufacture on a large scale, and it seems that most goods from there are now high quality, with just a few sources still making low-end stuff and copies.
Broadly speaking, Japan started in the same way after WW2, then developed and innovated over the years.
No politics implied in my comments.![]()
Yes, top end products that will be in land fill in 5 years, because as soon as the warranty is up, so are they, and they can't be repaired. Companies manufacture in China for one reason, and one reason only, cost. They get cheap labour and a government that doesn't care if they pollute as long as they bring in employment for the masses.
Fuji black-and-white film used to be made by Oriental Photo Industrial Co., Ltd., now Oriental Photo Corporation, Tokyo. I don't know whether that partnership still holds.
Yes, top end products that will be in land fill in 5 years, because as soon as the warranty is up, so are they, and they can't be repaired. Companies manufacture in China for one reason, and one reason only, cost. They get cheap labour and a government that doesn't care if they pollute as long as they bring in employment for the masses.
Yes, but cost is an advantage in manufacturing high-end products just as much as it is in manufacturing low-end.
Low cost does not always imply low quality. The joinery and overall fit & finish of Shen-Hao cameras, for example, embarrases anything Zone VI, Ron Wisner, or even Tachihara ever did. Very impressive. China has a lot of craftsmen; it isn't all just mass-produced garbage.
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