Introducing MGD33 — The Certified Global Replacement for Fujifilm FM33 & FM66 Archive Writer Microfilm
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Introducing MGD33 — The Certified Global Replacement for Fujifilm FM33 & FM66 Archive Writer Microfilm
Fujifilm ceased all microfilm production in December 2025. If your organisation operates a Kodak Archive Writer or Fujifilm Archive Writer — or any LED-based digital-to-microfilm system — MGD33 by Micrographics Data is your certified, drop-in supply solution. LE500-rated. Silver halide. Available now. Ships globally.
Order MGD33 Now →
On 26 December 2025, Fujifilm closed the final factory order window for its entire microfilm product range — permanently. For organisations that depend on LED-based archive writer systems such as the Kodak Archive Writer or Fujifilm ArchiveWriter to maintain their digital-to-microfilm preservation workflows, that date marked the end of a supply relationship many had relied upon for decades. The FM33 and FM66 — Fujifilm's dedicated archive media films — are now discontinued, and no further production is planned.
Micrographics Data Pte Ltd, Singapore's longest-established specialist in archival microfilm and document services (est. 1989), has developed and released MGD33: a new silver halide archive writer microfilm engineered specifically as a certified replacement for the Fujifilm FM33 and a fully compatible alternative to the Fujifilm FM66. MGD33 is designed for seamless operation in all Kodak Archive Writer models and all Fujifilm ArchiveWriter systems — with no modifications to hardware, exposure settings, or processing workflows required.
This article explains what MGD33 is, which systems it supports, how it compares technically to the films it replaces, and who needs it. If you are managing an archive writer programme and your FM33 or FM66 supply is running low, this is the information your procurement and archival teams need immediately.
Supply Alert: Fujifilm FM33 and FM66 archive media are permanently discontinued as of December 2025. No further production exists. Existing distribution stocks are finite and depleting rapidly. Institutions that have not yet sourced an alternative are advised to act without delay. MGD33 by Micrographics Data is available now for global order.
What Are the Fujifilm FM33 and FM66? Understanding Archive Writer Film
The Fujifilm FM33 and FM66 are silver halide microfilm stocks manufactured specifically for use in LED-based archive writer systems — digital-to-microfilm hardware that converts digital data and document images directly onto microfilm without an intermediate paper stage. These films were optimised for the exposure wavelengths and sensitivity profiles of LED archive writers, and were widely used by government agencies, national libraries, financial institutions, and records management bureaus globally to create legally admissible, long-life archival microfilm from digital sources.
An archive writer — sometimes referred to as a COM (Computer Output Microfilm) system — is a device that receives digital data and exposes it frame-by-frame onto a roll of microfilm using a controlled LED or laser light source. The output is a microfilm reel containing a permanent, optically verifiable record of the original digital data. Unlike camera-based microfilming, archive writers operate in a fully automated, dark-room-independent environment and can process thousands of frames per hour.
Archive writers require films with specific characteristics: precise sensitivity to the operating wavelength of the LED light source, consistent density range, excellent resolution for fine-detail reproduction, and archival-grade base materials. The Fujifilm FM series was formulated to meet exactly these requirements. With Fujifilm's market exit, every organisation running an archive writer programme globally was left without a qualified supply source — until now.
Important distinction: FM33 and FM66 are archive writer-specific films. They are different from Fujifilm's camera-based microfilm products (such as the Super HR-20 and HR-21), and are not interchangeable with general-purpose microfilm rolls. A suitable replacement must be engineered for archive writer exposure systems specifically. MGD33 is formulated for precisely this application.
Introducing MGD33: Certified Archive Writer Microfilm by Micrographics Data
MGD33 is an archival silver halide microfilm manufactured by Micrographics Data Pte Ltd and engineered as the direct replacement for the discontinued Fujifilm FM33 and as a fully compatible alternative to the Fujifilm FM66. It is formulated for use in LED-based digital archive writer systems including all Kodak Archive Writer models and all Fujifilm ArchiveWriter series hardware. MGD33 carries the LE500 archival life expectancy rating — 500 years under ISO 18902-compliant storage conditions — and requires no modifications to existing archive writer hardware, developer chemistry, or workflow settings.
The development of MGD33 was driven by a clear and urgent market need. As Fujifilm's FM series approaches depletion across global distribution channels, archive writer operators — many of whom manage critical government, financial, or institutional records — face a direct threat to continuity of their long-term preservation programmes. MGD33 addresses that threat with a product that is operationally equivalent to the FM33 and functionally superior on key archival parameters.
MGD33 — Key Technical Specifications
| Specification | MGD33 Value |
|---|---|
| Product Name | MGD33 Archival Archive Writer Microfilm |
| Manufacturer | Micrographics Data Pte Ltd |
| Emulsion Type | Silver Halide (archival grade) |
| Film Base | Polyester (PET) — dimensionally stable, archival |
| Life Expectancy Rating | LE500 — 500 years (ISO 18902 archival storage) |
| Primary Application | LED-based archive writers / COM systems |
| Compatible Systems | Kodak Archive Writer (all models); Fujifilm ArchiveWriter (all models) |
| Replaces / Alternatives | Fujifilm FM33 (direct replacement); Fujifilm FM66 (certified alternative) |
| Processing Chemistry | Compatible with standard silver halide microfilm developer and fixer lines |
| Standards Compliance | ISO 18906, ANSI/AIIM MS14, LE500 (ISO/ANSI) |
| Availability | In stock — available now for global order |
| Ordering | micrographicsdataonline.com |
Archive Writer Compatibility: Kodak and Fujifilm Systems
One of the most critical procurement questions for archive writer operators is whether a replacement film will perform correctly in their existing hardware. MGD33 has been formulated to operate within the exposure parameters of the two dominant archive writer platforms in global institutional use.
- Compatible with all Kodak Archive Writer generations
- No hardware modification required
- Consistent exposure density across full roll length
- Stable performance across operating temperatures
- Compatible with standard Kodak-specification developer lines
- Direct drop-in replacement for FM33 in all Fujifilm ArchiveWriter models
- Compatible alternative to FM66 for all Fujifilm archive writer systems
- No LED wavelength recalibration required
- Processes through existing Fujifilm-specification chemistry lines
- Maintains film transport and takeup reel compatibility
For procurement and IT managers: MGD33 is designed as a drop-in solution. Your existing archive writer hardware, processing line, and workflow procedures do not need to change. The transition from FM33 or FM66 to MGD33 requires only a supply reorder — not a system qualification programme or hardware update. Contact sales@micrographicsdata.com to confirm compatibility for your specific archive writer model and configuration.
MGD33 vs. Fujifilm FM33 & FM66: Technical Comparison
A structured comparison of MGD33 against the Fujifilm FM33 and FM66 demonstrates both the compatibility basis for the replacement claim and the archival advantages MGD33 delivers.
| Parameter | MGD33 (Micrographics Data) | Fujifilm FM33 | Fujifilm FM66 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Availability Status | ✓ In Stock — Global | ✗ Discontinued Dec 2025 | ✗ Discontinued Dec 2025 |
| Emulsion Type | Silver Halide (archival) | Silver Halide | Silver Halide |
| Film Base | Polyester (PET) — archival | Polyester | Polyester |
| Life Expectancy Rating | LE500 (500 years, ISO 18902) | Not LE500 rated | Not LE500 rated |
| Archive Writer Compatibility | Kodak & Fujifilm — All Models | Fujifilm systems | Fujifilm systems |
| LED Exposure Compatibility | Yes — optimised for LED archive writers | Yes | Yes |
| Processing Chemistry | Standard silver halide lines; MD18c + MF18c compatible | Fujifilm-specific chemistry recommended | Fujifilm-specific chemistry recommended |
| Supply Security | Active production — Micrographics Data | No further production | No further production |
| Global Shipping | Yes — worldwide | N/A — discontinued | N/A — discontinued |
| Standards Compliance | ISO 18906, ANSI/AIIM MS14, LE500 | ISO 18906 | ISO 18906 |
| Manufacturer Continuity | Micrographics Data — est. 1989, active | Fujifilm — exited market | Fujifilm — exited market |
The comparison underscores a fundamental supply reality: the FM33 and FM66 no longer exist as procurement options. MGD33 is not merely a comparable product — it is presently the only actively produced and globally distributed silver halide archive writer microfilm carrying an LE500 archival life expectancy rating. For institutions with legal, regulatory, or institutional mandates to maintain archival microfilm programmes, MGD33 is the authoritative succession product.
Who Needs MGD33? Global Use Cases and Compliance Drivers
Archive writer programmes exist across a wide range of institutional sectors. Each carries its own regulatory context and archival mandate. The following sectors represent the primary global customer base for MGD33.
Singapore regulatory context: Institutions subject to the PDPA, MAS TRM, ACRA, IRAS, NLB Act, or NHB frameworks that operate archive writer programmes can use MGD33 as a direct continuation of existing microfilm-based compliance strategies. Micrographics Data's Singapore team is available to confirm compliance applicability for specific regulatory contexts.
Why Archive Writer Film Quality Matters for Compliance and Longevity
The archival life expectancy of microfilm produced by an archive writer is determined not only by the COM system hardware but critically by the film stock itself. An LE500-rated film such as MGD33 — the highest archival rating defined under ANSI/ISO standards — guarantees a 500-year preservation lifespan under ISO 18902-compliant controlled storage. Using a lower-grade or unrated substitute film in an archive writer programme risks voiding the archival permanence claim of the resulting microfilm record, which may have legal and compliance implications for regulated institutions.
The LE500 rating (Life Expectancy 500) is the highest archival permanence classification under ANSI/ISO standards for photographic film. It certifies that, under controlled storage conditions defined by ISO 18902, the film medium will remain legible and chemically stable for 500 years. This rating is fundamental to the institutional value proposition of microfilm over digital-only storage — it is the basis on which governments, courts, and archives accept microfilm as an authoritative permanent record.
Using a non-LE500-rated film in an archive writer programme — or, worse, using a film stock not designed for the LED exposure characteristics of archive writers — creates two serious risks. First, the archival integrity of the resulting microfilm may be compromised at the film-stock level, regardless of the quality of the archive writer hardware. Second, in regulated environments, the use of a non-qualifying film may undermine the legal admissibility or compliance status of the microfilm record.
MGD33's LE500 rating ensures that institutions transitioning from FM33 or FM66 maintain the same archival permanence standard for all future archive writer output. The record quality is preserved. The compliance position is maintained. The supply chain is restored.
Micrographics Data: The Global Supply Successor to Fujifilm Archive Media
Micrographics Data Pte Ltd was founded in Singapore in 1989 — predating many of the institutions that have since become its customers. In the 37 years since, Micrographics Data has built the region's most comprehensive archival microfilm ecosystem: film manufacturing and supply, processing chemistry, COM systems, microfilm processors. The company has outlasted every major microfilm supplier that has exited the market, including Fujifilm, Kodak Imagelink, and Agfa.
With Fujifilm's December 2025 market exit, Micrographics Data has assumed the role of primary global supply successor for archive writer microfilm. MGD33 is the first product in a new generation of Micrographics Data archive-writer-specific film stocks, developed to fill the supply vacuum created by Fujifilm's withdrawal and to ensure the continuity of archive writer programmes globally.
Micrographics Data ships MGD33 globally from Singapore. Order lead times and bulk pricing are available by contacting sales@micrographicsdata.com or calling +65 6472 7255. Institutions with large ongoing archive writer programmes are encouraged to discuss annual supply agreements to ensure uninterrupted availability.
Complete archive writer ecosystem: Micrographics Data also supplies compatible silver halide processing chemistry — the MD18c Developer and MF18c Fixer — for use with MGD33 and all standard microfilm processing lines. Combined with our AW3 COM archive writer system and MD PRO5 microfilm processor. MGD33 forms part of a complete, single-source digital-to-microfilm solution available exclusively through Micrographics Data globally.
Frequently Asked Questions
Order MGD33 Archive Writer Microfilm — Delivered Globally
Supply is active and available now. Do not allow your archive writer programme to be disrupted by the Fujifilm discontinuation. Contact Micrographics Data today to secure your MGD33 supply.