Technically difficult, and the American EPA made the process
illegal for environmental reasons. Since this happened something
like 25 years ago before anyone really was concerned about
industrial pollution (I don't think governments really got on
the bandwagon until it was politically expedient), it must of
been one really dirty process. The chemistry is now impossible
to get, from what I gathered from a brief web search of the
subject.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Lasse Karlsson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, January 08, 2001 8:30 PM
Subject: Re: How to develop 16mm Kodachrome II film
> Thanks Sask. Bill and Mark for your replies.
> I'll forward the link to the guy.
> Interesting stuff.
> (One would have thought that their developing method would be
freely available, now that they don't support it any longer and
patents are long expired. Are the chemicals that difficult to
figure out? Or is it technically very difficult to do?)
>
> Lasse
>
> Mark Rofini wrote:
> > A guide on the web entitled "Hand Processing Kodachrome
Super 8"
> > may help. The URL may wrap so resurrect it as required. See:
> >
> > http://userwww.sfsu.edu/~ralph/process_site/kodachrome.html
> >
> > Mark Rofini
>
>
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>
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