MikeSeb
Subscriber
... i'm not any economic or business expert....
But let's all speculate and criticize, nonetheless.
... i'm not any economic or business expert....
But let's all speculate and criticize, nonetheless.
Boy Mike, you're on a roll. Any Crown involved here?
Not possible. TMAX 120 is coated on a 4.7 mil base, much thicker than most other medium format films. For example, 120/220 TXP is/was on a 3.9 mil base. One couldn't fit that much TMAX on a spool.They should make TMAX 220 or something. We should all write to Kodak. It might not help alot but it wouldn't hurt.
But let's all speculate and criticize, nonetheless.
Not possible. TMAX 120 is coated on a 4.7 mil base, much thicker than most other medium format films. For example, 120/220 TXP is/was on a 3.9 mil base. One couldn't fit that much TMAX on a spool.
Truer words were never spoke. Even 25 years ago, who shot 220 TXP ????
TXP is a nice film, but you can easily mimic it with TMY;
TXP in d-76 = .65 CI TMY2 in Xtol... at EI 800, with much high MTF, and finer grain.
It is also in 35mm, and ULF. So, what's the loss ?
Whining over TXP, 25 years after a better product was brought to you on a silver platter, is like slashing your wrists when Portrait Pan was taken off the market, leaving only Plus X, Tri X, and TXP.
Well, to each his own.
I don't know with absolute certainty (PE?), but expect it is technically possible. However, the point is that, even with one 220 black and white film available worldwide, Kodak's sales of TXP weren't sufficient to support profitable production. Why would it invest even one penny to develop a 220 version of TMY2?Is it possible to coat a thinner TMAX to make 220 an option?
Don, I am trying the TMY-II as we speak. After looking at the times for TMAX developer, they quote iso 400/800 at the same time for 7 minutes @1:4 dilution. TXP was 7 1/4 @ box speed. So not much in it really.
I went out into the back yard and ran some tests @ 400 and
800 and will use the standard dev time in TMAX developer to see how it looks.
A.
Yep, Ilford is intelligent; Kodak, profoundly stupid. Ilford is so intelligent that they were bankrupt a few years ago, as I recall. Doltish old Kodak isn't bankrupt---what a bunch of f--king idiots.
After all, it's a cinch, easy as pie, to downsize an enormous, multi-billion-dollar global company. We'll just conjure up the needed capital and know-how, and keep a few users of declining products happy, shareholders be damned. Let's just duct-tape a pair of 120 coating machines end-to-end and BANG! You got yer 220 machine, right there! Good thing Kodak has me around, to help them understand their business better.
How I love these threads.
One master roll of film will produce about 35,000 rolls of 35mm film (or the corresponding number of 120 or 220 film
PE
The master roll is 42" x 5000 ft. The usable surface area is 40". The number is calculated (approximated) for 35mm. Your figure is way off.
PE
I've read most of this thread laughing and crying as I went....![]()
I swore I would stay out of it.....
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Don, I am trying the TMY-II as we speak. After looking at the times for TMAX developer, they quote iso 400/800 at the same time for 7 minutes @1:4 dilution. TXP was 7 1/4 @ box speed. So not much in it really.
I went out into the back yard and ran some tests @ 400 and
800 and will use the standard dev time in TMAX developer to see how it looks.
A.
the the whole of the Kodak management cannot seem to be able to restructure a small (and declining) part of their business into a viable division in response to a changing market place.
I know, but thanks for explaining again. For every round of this, we've got a lot of new members who haven't heard the old songs before, and there are always a few who never quite got the tune.
One way or another, I'll figure out how to use the film that I like. I can deal with TX instead of TXP and 120 instead of 220, and if it ultimately means shooting less medium format and more large format, that's okay too, and ultimately I can even cut down a larger format to 2.25x3.25" sheets, if I've got to shoot that format. Materials have always been discontinued and changed and adapted, and as I see it, I just have to figure out how to do the work that I do with what's available.
Didn't Paul Strand complain about a particular paper being discontinued? I read that someplace, but couldn't find where.
Now, when Fuji or Ilford cancel a product it is more like "poor guys, sorry to hear that" and you move on. Kodak has always taken the brunt of law suits and complaints. Why not keep up the good work. The workers work an honest day at EK on analog products, but they cannot force you to buy product. The drop in sales below a sustainable level in any company's products must take place BEFORE they cancel it. So, you stopped buying, and then they stopped selling, not vice versa. That is foolish. They need the money.
PE
But you have to be able to find the products, and Kodak's distribution system went horribly wrong in many countries outside the US a few years ago now, but has never really recovered. That's a "Corporate Management" problem and not down to the Film Division, but it has a big impact on it.The workers work an honest day at EK on analog products, but they cannot force you to buy product.
PE
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