Kodak introduced two "Type K" duplicating films, which are meant to solve the problems associated with making copies of Kodachrome slides.
Type K was specified at a time when metallurgy was less advanced than it is today, and consequently characteristics may vary considerably between samples.
The single was released in 4 versions: Type A, Type K, Type B, and Theater Edition.
Type K may refer to:
Danish Section 107-2-D1 (10/13/16 A/250 V earthed)(Type K)
The competition was won by Tony Gibbs and his design, which was thought to be ultra-modern at the time, was designated Type K by the Post Office.
Internally designated Type K by Nakajima, it successfully competed with the Mitsubishi B5M for a production contract.
A Type K shouldn't be that spectacular, but there were no normal stars in sight-not with this element distribution and infall.
This became the basic building block, the "channel group", for all succeeding long haul systems, such as Type K and all the Type L systems into the late 1970s.
Changeover to Type K occurred circa 1976.