Eastman Kodak still manufactures the films but following its Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2012, responsibility for distribution and marketing, as with other products under
Kodak Professional brand, was given to
Kodak Alaris, a separate company controlled by the Kodak UK pension fund. It is sold in three
speeds: 100 (TMX), 400 (TMY-2) and 3200 (TMZ). The 100 and 400 speeds are given as
ISO numbers, but the 3200 is sold as a multi-speed film. There was also a slight change to the packaging. The main difference between the two are in the processing times. but it is meant to be
push-processed and the
DX CAS code on the 135 film cartridges is set to 3200 speed. It has uses in surveillance and other work where it can be given a
pushed exposure index between 1600 and 25000. On October 1, 2012, Kodak announced the discontinuation of Kodak Professional T-MAX P3200 film due to the high expense of manufacturing it for only a limited user demand. On February 23, 2018, Kodak announced the return of the film for March 2018. File:Kodak Tmax P3200 135 film cartridge 01.jpg|
35mm film (new 2018 stock) image:KodakP3200TMaxRollDXCoding.JPG|35mm film showing
CAS codes for 3200 speed image:KodakP3200TMaxBoxBack.JPG|Back of T-MAX 3200 box. 2002 version, expired April 2008. Note that Kodak does not state that film speed is to
ISO standard File:Zorb Football Kodak T-Max.jpg| A sample photo taken with Kodak T-MAX 400 ==See also==