Don't know the age of the core, but apparently made from older tooling, wound with what appears to be N74, (last years 400 speed ORWO MP film) in a cardboard can with Chinese lettering. No Idea what to make of it.So we got a Fimotec film, just cancelled this year, spooled onto a 60years old core and packed into a cardboard can?
FilmoTec (ORWO brand) has no own industrial scale coating facility. They never had. When they were founded about 20 years ago (by former ORWO employees) they installed emulsion making and cine film converting facilities. And coating was done at the Forte plant (Forte was also a shareholder at that time).
When Forte closed they switched to Harman technology as their coating partner at that time.
Sort of a side topic, but since it was brought up... are you sure about Harman doing the coating? I always understood that it was Inoviscoat in Germany who were coating ORWO films, since ages ago.
Filmotec was founded in 1998, Inoviscoat only founded in 2005, and got their production coater only in 2009.
This already should answer your question.
Furthermore, film production, especially in these times is a complex business, where production partners may vary, and even multiple partner productions were done.
I read carefully. And yot did not even mention Forte.If you read that more carefully you'll see that I was *not* questioning the Forte connection,
I read carefully. And yot did not even mention Forte.
Instead you spoke of Inoviscoat doing the job for Filmotec "since ages".
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