CinemanUK wrote:
Kodak might have intended that Super8 replace Regular 8,
"Might"?
CinemanUK wrote:...but the fact of the matter is that they did not succeed...
Oh but they did! Kodak succeeded at replacing regular 8 with super 8 as well as digital video replaced analog video. Just as no one was forced to buy super 8 to replace their regular 8, no one was forced to buy a digital video camera to replace their analog video camera. It seems important to you that video camera manufacturers drop support for their product line after X number of years while ignoring that Elmo, Bauer, Canon, Eumig, Fujica, Yashica, Beaulieu, Bolex, etc all did the same thing. I am in my mid-50's and I worked in a retail camera store in my youth for years. All these companies dropped support for one model as soon as the next model came out.
The fact that you can put new film in an old film camera is about as relevant to this discussion as being able to put a brand new VHS tape in a circa 1980s VHS camcorder. What does that prove? Neither the VHS camcorder manufacturer nor the super 8 camera manufacturer currently provide support for their old product line.
CinemanUK wrote:Speaking from personal experience, they achieve the goal of continuing sales and profit by imposing a limited life on support,
As did all the super 8 camera manufacturers during their day. Again, you make a distinction without a difference.
CinemanUK wrote:
Can you upgrade your VHS camera? Of course not. Neither can you upgrade 8mm video cameras, or Hi8 cameras.
Nor super 8 cameras nor regular 8 cameras.
CinemanUK wrote:However, we have been able to "upgrade" film cameras by the introduction of add on equipment such as anamophic lenses,
You can add an anamorphic lens to any camera, whether video or film. Sorry. Weak example.
CinemanUK wrote:or by adapting to film in Super 16,
How would you make a super 16 camera out of an Elmo 1012 super 8 camera? Oh, that's right. You'd have to replace your obsolete super 8 camera for a superior 16mm camera. ;)
Look, you can no more make an "improvement" to a super 8 camera than you can to video camera. And a removable lens is actually more common on video cameras than super 8 cameras.
CinemanUK wrote:and, of course, by improvements to filmstock.
Which costs as much or more to shoot in volume that it would cost to upgrade to another video camera that has better imagery. Sorry, but to keep casually leaving economics out of the equation is getting a bit obtuse. You present your argument as if film were cheap to shoot and video was expensive when, in fact, just the opposite is true.
CinemanUK wrote: We have not had to replace cameras in order to achieve these "upgrades".
Of course you do. You can't load 16mm film into a super 8 camera nor super 8 film into an 8mm camera. So if you are shooting in 8mm and want the features of the latest and greatest super 8 camera, then you have to buy the super 8 cameras. If you want 16mm quality, then you will have to replace your Super 8 camera with a 16mm camera.
CinemanUK wrote: To these, one can add improvements to filmstock.
So all super 8 cameras handle Vision 200? E64?
CinemanUK wrote:You must excuse me if I say that this is the first time I have seen it claimed that the increasing sophistication of Super8 cameras is owed to the manufacturers of video cameras. I have to say that I have some doubts about whether you are correct. My first cine camera (a Regular 8mm which I still have and which is still working) had automatic exposure and an excellent zoom lense long before consumer video cameras were on the market
I never referred to zoom lenses and auto exposure as sophisticated features. I am talking about things like studio quiet operation like you find in the last model Nizos, multiple exposure and lap dissolve capabilities, microprocessor control, electronic shutter control, etc. These are the sorts of things that camera manufacturers started putting into their super 8 cameras in the last years to try and maintain their market share against the coming onslaught of home video. I know for a fact that this is the case because I went to countless seminars sponsored by Elmo, Canon, Bolex and the such where they addressed this strategy in great detail. Believe me, if home video was not on the horizon, super 8 manufacturers would have trickled out the features across as many future models as they could. This trend is not unique to the electronics industry.
CinemanUK wrote:...and I think the increasing sophistaction was rather more attributable to the desire of those who could afford to pay higher prices being prepared to do so in order to get a "better" camera
But I thought this approach was unique to the dastardly video camera manufacturers. ;)
CinemanUK wrote:I am not sure why the production of sound cartridges was discontinued, but the fact that they were never prevented silent film cartridges being loaded, and so the discontinuance did not require any cinematographer to dispose of his camera.
But, of course, that isn't the argument I was making, was it?
I asked if you could put a SOUND CART in a SILENT camera. You can't. Which means if you want to shoot on sound film, you had to replace your obsolete silent camera and get the latest, greatest sound camera. If the silent cameras could have accepted sound carts, then it would cut into future sound camera sales because they knew a large number of people would not necessarily want location sound but would want to add music and narration. Short of having their film striped (a service that Kodak offered at additional cost, of course), they would have to buy another camera to have a built in sound stripe on their film.
It is important in your argument to realize that Kodak had planned on the eventual implementation of sound from the very first days of super 8 design. The camera manufacturers knew this and could have made their silent cameras to accept future sound carts but didn't for the very same built-in obsolescence that you seem to feel is unique to the video industry but not the film industry.
CinemanUK wrote:Try putting an 8mm video tape into a VHS camera. Of course one cannot, but it illustrates the comparison.
Kind of like trying to put a super 8 cart into an 8mm camera? ;)
CinemanUK wrote:Similarly, I am not sure I understand the point you seek make in relation to this subject being discussed on a "Super8 forum".
Sorry. It used to be called "Shooting8mm". I stand corrected in my reference to the forum but not in my position about the easy availability of both film and video cameras in the used market. You can replace a broken video camera just as easily as you can replace a broken film camera. Thus no one is "forced" to buy into the next format if they don't want. You can still shoot and edit with VHS decks if you so desire.
CinemanUK wrote: You may remember that the point on which I engaged you was your assertion in your message dated 23 March 2011 that "Thus the R&D money goes into more advances in digital to bridge that quality gap for the unconvinced. My point was simply that I disagreed with you and put forward the argument that research and development money goes to power the roundabout of designed obselence. With respect nothing you have said serves to disprove this.
Of course it does. Unless, of course, you actually feel that R&D on consumer HD was completed in the late 70s and that the camera manufacturers have been "holding back" all this time. If not, then you have to admit that R&D goes to improving image quality to capture and maintain market share. If I am wrong, then the image quality of neither film nor video would get any better over the years.
Also, let's be clear about something that you seem to confuse: The makers of "film" are not the same as the makers of "film cameras". That you can still put new film in an old camera that still works proves about as much as me putting a new VHS tape in an old camcorder that still works. This says nothing about the ethics of video camera manufacturers compared to film camera manufacturers. They both drop support of their product when the next model comes out.
Roger