16mm B&W negative film is available in bulk rolls, if one does not want to split. Price is pretty reasonable. This single perf film works in all 16mm still cameras of which I am aware.
I use either the Jobo 16mm reels or the single-spiral Stainless Steel reels. The nice thing about the SS reels is that if you load it so the perforations are toward the spiral, the image portion does not touch anything. Yes, two of the 16mm reels fit nicely in a 35mm SS tank.
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That Kodak bulk film above does indeed seem like a pretty good deal. All the cameras I would use dont require perforated film. Do the perf show up on the scan? What iso is that? The Pentax Auto 110 use iso 100 and 400 I believe so presumably if this were a lower iso I guess I’d be underexposed.
Good pickup, thanks for the corrections. Looks like indeed, the film drive of the minicord uses both sets of sprocket holes. The sad thing about cameras that use the double perf 16mm is the opening is not much bigger than Minox (which expects film with no perfs.) 10mmx10mm vs 8mmx11mm.
I'd probably restate that the cameras with some sort of cam to space the frames can use the single perf film.
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Not to get too far off of topic but I've found that the Pratika MTL3 runs 16mm just fine.
Would not all common 35mm SLRs do so ?
There is nothing special about the Praktica L-series on the matter of transport.
Nope.
Most will not run as there needs to be something engage a sprocket. Otherwise the film won't advance. The Praktika will just pull the film out of the canister regardless.
Someone will know better but i do think the perfs get into frame on 110.
Just from pics online the K battery was short and fat right? Might have better luck taping together some 3v lithium watch style batteries +\- spacers.
I want to get a Minolta 16 QT and/or MG-S. Are cds meters pretty likely to be still working? I’d typically try to avoid selenium metered cameras like the regular MG but figure that these types of cameras are more likely to have been little used and spent their lives in cases (vs other selenium meter cameras).
Donald; would an N size 1.5v alkaline fit better? They are shorter than AAA but I'm not sure about the diameter.
With regards to the Kodak’s K battery I saw this on a Flickr post
“The Kodak Pocket Instamatic 60 takes a "K" battery which is no longer made. To make a replacement battery I taped three #357 button cells together and added aluminum metallic tape to the positive end to make contact with the camera. See subsequent photos for details. Verify that the camera is working by half-pressing the shutter and seeing if the aperture opens up in low light.”
Donald; would an N size 1.5v alkaline fit better? They are shorter than AAA but I'm not sure about the diameter.
Cholentpot; Wouldn't the 16mm film be running to close to the lens? With 35mm the edges of the film sit on the inner film rails which are usually a few thousands above the film gate. I would think that at larger apertures the image focus would not agree with the focusing screen focus.
Thus you refer to the slitting of the take-up spool, that enables to feed a strip even in center? Otherwise all common SLRs have similar kind of friction clutch to drive the take-up spool.
Concerning the focusing, I forgot about the unfit perforations, and thus thought the strip would run with one rebated over the rail, but wondered why there was no effect of ill-focus at the opposite site.
If the strip runs center, showing off-focus effct, one could patch smooth tape at the sides of the film gate to lift up the film to proper height.
Most cameras have some sort of clutch that unless engaged the take-up spool won't pull. The MTL has no such thing.
Sounds like you’ve researched it pretty well. I saw the YouTube video where a guy cobbles together a harness using the case of an old battery or that people refill the old battery case with small cells. Just a quick search of ebay shows that it’s not too hard to find a camera with a battery still in it if that’s the route someone wanted to go (but maybe increase the chance that the camera is damaged from a battery leak). I like your solution better. I wondered if 2 aaa or a 123A battery would fit, then some combination of metal strip, hot glue and tape would complete a battery pack that fit without rattling around and made proper battery contact.
I have not come across a model where the take-up spool is not driven the moment the winding lever is engaged.
My favourite is the Minolta Mk2 110 zoom which I prefer over my Pentax 110. I don't think I paid more than £25 for it
Seems to be rare these days. Would love to find one for $30.
As said I did come across any such camera, and it does not make sense either, But a problem that I see and already hinted at is, that some take-up spools do not take small strips at center and/or need a peforation hole to arrest at a hook. This already will disqualify some 35 SLRs as "alternative" for a type 110 camera.All I can say is try it yourself. I've got a couple dozen SLRs. Aside from the 90's whizbang autos that will eat anything the manual SLRs don't seem to work with film that is too small.
As said I did come across any such camera, and it does not make sense either, But a problem that I see and already hinted at is, that some take-up spools do not take small strips at center and/or need a peforation hole to arrest at a hook. This already will disqualify some 35 SLRs as "alternative" for a type 110 camera.
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