Hello Ian,
I know the Ilford coating line at Mobberley was British made and upgraded by the manufacturers.
yes, that is the information we've got at the Ilford factory tour, too.
I've heard Simon Galley say the same about the Agfa machinery they bought, one was the one used for the edge markings of 35mm and 120 films.
Well, the situation with the very modern Agfa 135 film converting line was real challenging for Ilford. At the factory tour we've seen this huge line in full operation, and Simon explained us the details. The main problem was that the workers who dismantled the machinery in Germany for transportation to Mobberley did some severe mistakes: They cut all the electric cables, without marking the connection points!! And there were more than 100,000 different cables! The Ilford engineers and technicians needed more than one year to get this converting line running again.
Simon described that with the wonderful and unique British black humour: "Before we've bought the Agfa machinery our engineers did not speak one single German word. After the installation they are speaking fluently German......"

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The factory tour was amazing. Not only because of the fascinating technological information we've got (they even made a test coating run for us under light; and I was only 60cm away from the coating head, an unforgettable experience) but also because of the very kind, friendly and very funny and humerous Ilford employees. We've laughed so much this day. Just another quote from one of Simon's colleagues: "I was hired at the beginning of the 80ies here at Ilford to implement colour film production. You have seen the big green grass field in the middle of our plant area. There the colour film coating machine should have been built. The green grass field and our product portfolio clearly shows you how successful I was....."

. They have cracked joke after joke. At the end of the day I had a muscle soreness in my midriff

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The other thing Simon told us was all the major companies had licensed Ilford's patented coating head technology.
I assume that he had probably referred to certain parts. Because the Agfa technology is quite different. As I have seen both life I can directly compare.
Then Ilford have had agreements with Fuji manufacturing some films for them, also B&W paper, and Foma have (or had) a joint confectioning plant with Fuji. So there's a lot of inter-trading between some of the companies.
Ian
Yes, inter-trading is important. But it also changes over time quite a lot due to market changes. So the situation five years ago can be completely different today.
Best regards,
Henning