Microfilm
is
an
analog
storage
medium
for
books,
periodicals
and
engineering
drawings.
Its
most
standard
form
is
a
roll
of
black
and
white
35mm
photographic
film.
Another
form,
more
common
for
engineering
drawings,
is
a
Hollerithpunch
card
that
mounts
a
single
exposure.
Most
microfilm
media
have
a
digital
indexing
system
exposed
on
the
edge
of
each
image,
but
this
data
is
not
required
to
use
the
microfilm,
but
rather
to
support
automated
retrieval
systems.
Microfilm
is
not
the
most
compact
analog
microform
in
wide
use.
Microfiche
is
more
compact.
The
medium
has
numerous
advantages:
First,
it
is
compact,
with
far
smaller
storage
costs
than
paper
documents.
Generally,
a
year
of
a
periodical
takes
10%
of
the
space
and
3%
of
the
weight.
Second,
it
is
lower
cost
than
a
standard
subscription.
Most
microfilm
services
get
a
bulk
discount
on
reproduction
rights,
and
have
lower
reproduction
costs
than
a
comparable
amount
of
printed
paper.
Third,
it
is
a
stable
archival
form.
Most
library
microfilms
use
polyester
with
silver-halide
dyes
in
hard
gelatin,
with
an
estimated
life
of
500
years
in
air-conditioning.
In
tropical
climates
with
high
humidities,
fungus
eats
the
gelatin
used
to
hold
silver-halide.
In
the
tropics,
diazo-based
systems
with
lower
archival
lives
(20
years)
are
preferable,
because
they
have
polyester
or
epoxy
surfaces.
Fourth,
since
it
is
analog
(an
actual
image
of
the
original
data),
it
is
easy
to
view.
Unlike
digital
media,
the
data
format
is
instantly
comprehensible
to
persons
literate
in
the
language;
the
only
additional
equipment
that
is
needed
is
a
simple
magnifying
glass.
This
reduces
the
possibility
of
obsolescence.
Systems
that
mount
microfilm
images
in
punch
cards
have
been
widely
used
for
archival
storage
of
engineering
information.
For
example,
when
airlines
demand
archival
engineering
drawings
to
support
purchased
equipment
(in
case
the
vendor
goes
out
of
business),
(as
of
1999)
they
normally
specified
punch-card-mounted
microfilm
with
an
industry-standard
indexing
system
punched
into
the
card.
This
permits
automated
reproduction,
as
well
as
permitting
mechanical
card-sorting
equipment
to
sort
and
select
microfilm
drawings.
Hollerith-mounted
microfilm
is
roughly
3%
of
the
size
and
space
of
conventional
paper
or
vellum
engineering
drawings.
Some
military
contracts
around
1980
began
to
specify
digital
storage
of
engineering
and
maintenance
data
because
the
expenses
were
even
lower
than
microfilm,
but
these
programs
are
now
finding
it
difficult
to
purchase
new
readers
for
the
old
formats.
The
principal
disadvantage
of
microfilm
is
that
the
image
is
too
small
to
read.
Libraries
use
special
readers
that
project
full-size
images
on
a
ground-glass
screen.
Another
disadvantage,
is
that
a
conventional
photocopier
cannot
reproduce
the
images.
Libraries
using
microfilm
often
have
a
few
viewers
that
can
produce
a
photocopy
of
an
image,
for
a
nominal
fee.
The
final
disadvantage
is
that
microfilm
can
only
be
reproduced
a
limited
number
of
times,
while
digital
media
regenerate
and
often
include
error
detection
and
correction
schemes.