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Post by Wright Blan on Jun 3, 2005 16:36:19 GMT
Thank you master. Until that great day arrives, I will hold my anticipation. Thanks,Lance. Actually, you might want to look for some footage of the 2002 UGA/ Georgia Tech game (16mm or otherwise) to see how bad of a beating Boise State is going to get this fall. Go Dawgs! ;D
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Post by William Martin on Jun 8, 2005 15:37:54 GMT
The Model # says 1592 C . So does anyone have an idea of who or where I can find some Who on film ? P.S. Is this a good projector ? And how much is it worth ? Thanks,Lance. ok, its a mid 1970s model (autoloader?) designed I think for schools and the like, it is a good robust model and is worth between £100 and £200 ($200-$400ish) depending on the condition, the lamp should be replaicable as its a comparitivly new model,by the way is it optical or magnetic sound(or duel)? as most Dr Who film will be optical sound.
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Post by Steven Sigel on Jun 8, 2005 16:19:27 GMT
Hi William --
I think you're way too high on the price for that machine -- these often sell for $25 or less on ebay. I had a few of them that I had to give away. Collectors don't like these because they have a tendancy to shred film, and they also have a badly designed worm gear that cracks over time and is very hard to replace... If you know anyone who would pay $200 for one of these, send him/her my way, I'd be more than happy find them one... :-) If you're buying a projector, you're best bets are Elmo 16-CL , EIKI SSL (both slot-thread), or Kodak Pageant 250s (If you like manual thread)
The B&H machine is optical -- mag track 16mm projectors are very uncommon, and mag track films are even less common. I've never heard of a magnetic only 16mm projector...
Dr. Who 16mm prints are all optical as far as I know (or mute with a separate mag track - but you need special gear to play those - not just a projector with mag soundtrack capability)
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Post by William Martin on Jun 22, 2005 15:08:09 GMT
well it was a quote from an auction site but yes that is rather high When I bought one it was £30, and I've never trusted auto threading so I always thread it by hand. The Elmo is a nice one but I've always wanted a Gaumont-Kalee 35mm , still I'd have to buy a bigger house first. by the way what format was the sep mag, 1" or 1/2" or some other?
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Post by Steven Sigel on Jun 24, 2005 14:05:21 GMT
William: The Sepmags (for 16mm) are 16mm :-) The have sprocket holes just like a film, except that they're fullcoat magnetic... I've got a few films (not dr who) that have sepmags, but I have no way to play them.... Too bad...
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Post by William Martin on Jun 25, 2005 14:14:05 GMT
your best bet would be a multi-media department of a large University, If you explained things to them I'm sure they'd help you out. And since digital 16 is now replacing sepmag you may pick up a reader cheapish.
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Post by Steven Sigel on Jun 25, 2005 16:42:29 GMT
Yeah, there are some projectors that play sepmag that turn up on ebay from time to time (2 sets of arms) but they're usually pretty expensive, and while I have several films w/ sepmag tracks, only one of them is interesting and it's only about 15-20 minutes...
Not sure about a university - seems unlikey, why would they have sepmag? Maybe if they were doing production -- but no one runs films that way....
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Post by William Martin on Jun 27, 2005 17:00:45 GMT
Yeah, there are some projectors that play sepmag that turn up on ebay from time to time (2 sets of arms) but they're usually pretty expensive, and while I have several films w/ sepmag tracks, only one of them is interesting and it's only about 15-20 minutes... Not sure about a university - seems unlikey, why would they have sepmag? Maybe if they were doing production -- but no one runs films that way.... what is the inetersting one? and it depends on the department, but some still have sepmag(the students like it apparently, for example www.fiatifta.org/aboutfiat/news/old/1999/9901/02.html) but they are all being replaced now so the sooner the better
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Post by Steven Sigel on Jun 27, 2005 18:26:11 GMT
It's a blooper reel from a UK Sci-Fi TV Show. (Not Dr. Who).
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Post by ethantyler on Jul 1, 2005 4:15:36 GMT
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Post by William Martin on Jul 4, 2005 14:23:26 GMT
It's a blooper reel from a UK Sci-Fi TV Show. (Not Dr. Who). Not Dr Who? shame what show would that be ? and talking of blooper reels, I wonder if there are any for Dr Who? although how we'd check this I don't know.
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Post by Steve on Jul 4, 2005 14:39:47 GMT
Yeah, there are some Dr. Who Bloopers - there were video copies circulating around fandom years and years ago.. Mostly Tom Baker era, and I think there are some from Sylvester McCoy as well... It's a blooper reel from a UK Sci-Fi TV Show. (Not Dr. Who). Not Dr Who? shame what show would that be ? and talking of blooper reels, I wonder if there are any for Dr Who? although how we'd check this I don't know.
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Post by William Martin on Jul 4, 2005 14:58:40 GMT
The ones with John Cleese? I've seen some of those, I wonder if there are any earlier, BBC staff may not realise that we would be interested in perhaps a 60's Dr Who blooper reel, if such a thing exists.
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Post by Stuart Douglas on Jul 4, 2005 16:32:59 GMT
The ones with John Cleese? I've seen some of those, I wonder if there are any earlier, BBC staff may not realise that we would be interested in perhaps a 60's Dr Who blooper reel, if such a thing exists. A 60s blooper reel? It always seems to me that they broadcast the bloopers as part of the show in the 60s... Stuart
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Post by William Martin on Jul 6, 2005 13:35:38 GMT
;D
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