Ok, so y'all missed my post.
Here is the bottom line. If those cameras work it will be rather meaningless if 35mm film is hard to get or impossible to get! This is a possible trend in that MF and LF may be the trend of the future as the dust settles.
PE
This is not a specious question. If these machines are retired, there will be no 35mm film to feed any operational camera.
Agreed. When Hollywood goes digital, 35mm will be pretty well DONE almost overnight.
Always the ray of sunshine, there, aren't ya Ron ...
Even with the decline, there's still some money left in the old horse.
"except the contribution it makes to a bottom line ie the overall financial well being of a company, and the volume purchasing of some raw materials."
This is exactly what I am talking about. Seeing the volumes shot every day here in Hollywood compared to the volumes shot by the small number of film-using still photographers, I would be surprised if a healthy majority of their income from film did not come from the motion picture industry, and if a healthy majority of their raw materials ordered in bulk were not intended for use in MP films. Lowered demand for MP film would no doubt make it harder to make a profit with still film...as if it isn't hard enough already. I am not saying that the same people generally buy both MP and still film, or that they are both useful for the same purpose. What I am saying is that the volume of MP film produced and sold has to *far* outweigh the volume of still film produced and sold, and that they must therefore make much more money with MP film. I think this due to two things: 1. Film is still the standard professional medium in the MP industry, and 2. The sheer lengths of film used in MP vs. still shooting. I will probably shoot as much surface area of film in my entire life as a TV series production shoots on one episode...hell; probably even a week, or a day in some cases. When MP film goes out, Kodak and Fuji are going to lose a ton of power to get discounted prices for bulk purchases, not to mention having a bunch of wasted equipment, supplies, real estate, and jobs lying around.
That's my pick, too. I believe even the new ones, such as the MP, have shutters rated to over 400k cycles.Any Leica rangefinder camera would be a good candidate. If bought today at a favorable price it is the camera with the best chance of holding and increasing value in 2038........
The big problem with hollywood going totally digital is in the cost of stowage. Currently to store a digital motion picture the yearly rate is in the thousands of dollars compared to mere hundreds for film. I also read that bits of the digital encryption, files, or whatever they call it are being corrupted over time & cost for a fix is enormous. Much cheaper to use film & convert to digital.
The big problem with hollywood going totally digital is in the cost of stowage. Currently to store a digital motion picture the yearly rate is in the thousands of dollars compared to mere hundreds for film. I also read that bits of the digital encryption, files, or whatever they call it are being corrupted over time & cost for a fix is enormous. Much cheaper to use film & convert to digital.
Silver;
Kodak figures show that digital storage, at the present time, is considerably higher than that of analog storage. I have to agree with GB Hill on this one. In fact, I posted rather close figures on this elsewhere. The big costs are in maintaining storage for the originals, and not the prints. Prints are disposable.
PE
I'll ask another question here.
What 35mm slitting, perfing and spooling equipment will be operational in 2038 considering they have to be custom built and constantly maintained. This is not a specious question. If these machines are retired, there will be no 35mm film to feed any operational camera.
It is easy to slit and chop roll and sheet film. Perfing without defects and removal of the perf debris is not trivial.
Tim;
I don't disagree with anything you said. Your last line says it all though. You need someone with the will to do it and it must somehow make a profit.
No, these machines are not impossible to build. But if they all wear out, and no one wants to build one for lack of profit, then the 35mm cameras will become truly obsolete. I'm trying to point out that LF film and plates take much less infrastructure to support as far as large industry is concerned. A lone person can make enough LF film for a vacation shooting some good pix. That is my bottom line.
Well, the archiving figures from George Eastman House agree as well, that film storage is far less expensive than digital storage and the storage format does not go out of date. The figures I've seen quoted run up as high as a 10X higher cost for digital storage.
PE
To get back to the original topic at hand, I suspect that most mechanical cameras will continue to work for the next 30-40 years. I don't see there being a problem for the Nikkormats, FM series, F/F2, etc, to continue functioning at least mechanically. Same with the SR/SRT series Minoltas, FT series Canons, mechanical Pentax bodies, etc. Batteries might not be available for the meters, and parts to repair the meters will likely be fairly well dried up, so it may be sunny-16 time by then.
-J
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