Kodak Super 8 Film Processor 1975
Processing in the office
This promotional film for the Kodak Supermatic 8 Film Processor emphasizes the unit’s reliability and ease-of-use — in fact, the publicity for the unit called it the “processor for people who have never processed film before.” It likely dates to the mid 1970s. According to the film (and an accompanying brochure): “The Supermatic 8 Processor can be loaded in daylight with any Super-8 cartridge (50 foot, 200 foot, and special 400 foot cartridges). The processed film, ready to project, emerges 13 1/2 minutes later (50 feet). The machine needs only sources of water and electricity, and a drain. Chemicals are added from prepared packages, and the processor automatically maintains chemistry quality. When chemicals are exhausted, the machine disposes of them, cleans itself, and calls for new chemicals before it will restart. The Supermatic 8 processor can at present process only a single emulsion, the new Kodak [Ektachrome] SM 7244, which is available in 50 foot and 200 foot silent and sound cartridges. The price of the Supermatic 8 processor is $12,500. About 10-20 Super 8 cartridges per day will amortize such a capital outlay, over a few years’ period, by comparison with typical commercial processing costs.”