Filmotec has got own conversion machinery. From the start.
What they did not have so far is the ability for spooling type 135. As this is a product for a market they did not serve in the past.
They may very well be selling production with that machinery to others.From what I’ve heard from several members here, this kind of machinery costs really good money… hundreds of thousands of dollars.
I find it curious that a company invests serious money on machinery, only to produce some 36,000 rolls of film.
Judging by the information I have, the revenue of the film sales won’t even pay for the machine alone!
If they have a new finishing line, it may make economic sense to do a single test run (36,000 rolls) to make sure everything works well before going into full-time production of this or a future color film.
They may very well be selling production with that machinery to others.
So much of the industry is contracting out.
They must have already tested the new finishing line with other materials.
They may very well be selling production with that machinery to others.
So much of the industry is contracting out.
I wonder what the deal is with the limited edition of 36000 rolls.
Exactly, conversion must be a good business right now (see: fuji using Kodak for conversion of Fuji C200)
or is that Fuji Buying Fuji C200 lock stock and barrel from Kodak?
They must have already tested the new finishing line with other materials.
Perhaps related, but I've noticed that Bergger Pancro 400 is back in stock again at a retailer that was out of stock a few weeks ago
By “other materials”, I mean test materials: bad coating runs, expired film, test coatings (with non-photo-sensitive materials), etc.
Nobody in their right mind would test new equipment with known good materials, only to lose everything if it fails.
also looking at the Motion Picture side, it seems that N75 is NOT listed, But their is yet another 400 Speed B&W Movie stock. "ORWO P400 V3" No data on any of the listed items. Not clear if UN54 is still going to be arround, as it is "soon" in one place.
If you don't test it with Perfect materials, how can you know if everything is working right? the price of film always incudes the cost of the stock that was fed through the machine in the light, the stock that was opened in the light as soon as it came off the machine, the blank film that was sent to processing right away. that is called Quality control.Nobody in their right mind would test new equipment with known good materials, only to lose everything if it fails.
And...we have the options with pricing, all ORWO does in the black and white film segment cut to canisters from now on:
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