I’m honestly more confused than anything now. 35mm film, even in 100 ft rolls, should be the exact same film as regular pre-packed film cassettes. You slit it and perf it the exact same, but the machine at the end rolls it up into a bulk loading core rather than into a cassette. Your saying that they need to slit the film on a different machine even though it’s the same film? That makes no sense to me.
It has just been too long since the last Ilford tour in 2008 to remember how it took 35mm perforated film, cut it into 100ft rolls and then placed it into rolls but whatever it does, it does it at a cost that enables it to be sold ( presumably at a profit) for less than it sells 35mm cassettes
I cannot help feeling that it has to be a relatively simple operation by comparison to the quite highly automated machinery that churns out 35mm cassettes.
I even wonder if I cannot remember much about the bulk roll area because Ilford largely by-passed it on the tour suggesting to me there was little to see by comparison to the machinery used for 35mm cassettes which still sticks in my mind
How Kodak does bulk rolls has never been explained in any detail as far as I can recall so any compare and contrast study is impossible
Our only link to Kodak seems to be Matt who has a source with impeccable credentials. It might be nice if that source were to give details on the Kodak bulk roll process to an extent that we could then grasp exactly what has changed since it was able to produce bulk rolls cheaper than cassettes
I don't suppose that Matt's source knows what the Ilford process is by comparison but that's a guess. For all I know, knowledge of what is used for bulk rolls is more universal than I know between companies' engineers.
More knowledge of exactly what happens at both companies might dispel any doubts we have that Kodak just cannot replicate the Ilford process if it wanted to and sell more bulk rolls at a cheaper price .
It has to be several years since the original thread arose because of the shock experienced by Kodak users when bulk rolls became more expensive than cassettes. There was a deal of suspicion then that Kodak had deliberately chosen to alter the relationship between the price of bulk rolls v cassettes as a means of making bulk rolls purchase wither on the vine so to speak. That way the consumers kill the market by refusing to buy and allow Kodak to say that bulk rolls are no longer viable which of course would be true.
To be honest that has largely happened in the U.K where the price of Kodak bulk rolls are such that the market is dead. This may not be true of the U.S. - I don't know.
pentaxuser