MovieStuff wrote:To put this in a more accurate perspective, the only reason that Kodachrome 16mm is still being offered is because its fate is determined in a different division of Kodak, along with all the other 16mm film stocks. The decision to drop K40 Super 8 had no effect on any 16mm stock, including Kodachrome in 16mm. But, logically, if there wasn't enough S8-K40 being sold, then the ax certainly looms in the near future for 16mm Kodachrome, the sales of which are doodly, compared to Super 8.Jim Carlile wrote:The fact that Kodak is supposedly still going to be offering 16mm Kodachrome brings up a huge and obvious contradiction: how many labs worldwide process 16, but don't process S8? None that I can think of.....
Since they can easily, I don't think processing old rolls of S8 is going to be a problem as long as K-16 is available.
So actually, you've got the logic in reverse: Any lab that can process Super 8 Kodachrome can also process 16mm Kodachrome, the volume of which is insignificant compared to Super 8. And if there is no more Super 8 Kodachrome to process, then the minimal number of 16mm Kodachrome rolls won't be enough volume to justify maintaining a K14 processing facility. Therefore, the existence of Kodachrome in 16mm means nothing, in terms of maintaining K14 processing for Super 8.
Roger Evans
http://www.moviestuff.tv
I´d put my money on that the problem with S8 is costs/profits:
1) Questionable processing quailty for US K40 users
2) Too high costs sending US K40s to Europe.
3) Costly logistics - Europe too
Possibly the prepaid mailer/processing system worked out well in E but due to (1) above unsatisfactory in US. What isn´t good for US customers in´t good for Kodak?
Got to be a costs/profit/future unpreditcably issue.
T