just had a peek at Wittner's website. It appears they've started selling raw Super8 material in 400ft rolls as well! This includes K40, Fuji negative and Orwo for the moment being.

Regards,
Alex
Moderator: Andreas Wideroe
I agree.matt5791 wrote:The only viable way for you to make a sucess of your mag is if the film is cheaper than in the carts - I really can't imagine that there could be enough demand generated from just the possibility of extra running time.
I would say that slitting the film down from 35mm is probably the only viable option, because 50 cents a foot (or 40 or 30 for that matter) is a non starter - the use of 16mm would be a no-brainer.
I agree in principle, and do not feel that Kodak are in any way obliged to charge any less- or to offer the film in this form at all.matt5791 wrote:Film at 50 cents a foot sounds like a utter joke - and I don't blame Kodak because this must be a specialist order.
Yeah, that's what made me think the 35mm might be an easier starting point... plus it might be a simpler machine/workflow, especially if 400' lengths are used.supermag400_inventor wrote:The ideal solution would be to use 5 inch unperforated production films and get more strips of super 8. However, it's getting it, that's the problem.
supermag400_inventor wrote:The ideal solution would be to use 5 inch unperforated production films and get more strips of super 8. However, it's getting it, that's the problem.
Here is a clip of the Supermag working, for those who wish to see it.
http://www.supermag400.com/South%20Mountain.htm