pentaxuser
Member
You might be right but it just seems incredible that EK costs are twice as high as Ilford for bulk rolls( I base this on Ilford v Kodak bulk rolls in the U.K.) but on the basis of your premise are about the same for cassettes. So economies of scale work against EK on bulk but on the other hand do not work for it compared to Ilford on cassettes. So for EK it is not even lose/win but lose/lose.Or (and even more likely), EK's costs are much higher per roll for the parts of the production that are particular to bulk rolls.
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To turn my question to Ilford in reverse: I wonder what EK's bulk to cassette price was even as recently as 3-4 years ago. I suspect it wasn't twice as expensive then, so could the loss of EK's market in the intervening few years explain this massive rise in bulk to cassette price ratio?
I am one who wishes EK well in its film business, believing that as film users it is in our interests that it survives but my credibility is sorely stretched on this issue and without an explanation from EK which I am not going to get, I will tend to ascribe the worst behaviour or combinations of behaviours to it, be that stupidity or greed with a large helping of arrogance towards its consumers.
pentaxuser
