Kindermann thermoscope

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Donald Qualls

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I'm going to guess that the chrome frame is the same size and thickness as a slide mount, and you'd use this by loading it into your chosen slide projector and read the temperature off the screen -- to know how well your projector is protecting your chromes. Probably of more use in large, high-powered projectors intended for movie theater size screens than with the small ones that used to be sold for home use.
 

AgX

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For checking the temperature one would not need that circular scale.
I think the scale was intended as aberration test-target for testing the projector lens.


Concerning the temperature: how would that 2-temperature scale work ? I am clueless, unless there were 2 meters and thus 2 pointers.
Is there 1 pointer and its shadow or are there 2 pointers?
 
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superflash

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AgX:

there is only one pointer (black on the left, in the pic) and it indicates a single value on a double scale, that value is expressed both in celsius (below) and in farenheit (above).
But how should I use the letters A, B and C and the numbers 1 to 10 that are in the right side and lower left corner?
 

Donald Qualls

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Again, an educated guess, but the overall grid is probably for evaluating geometric distortion (pincushion and barrel distortion, fairly common in projection lenses) and/or for aligning a tilting slide carrier to remove keystone on the screen when the projector has to be angled up or down. The scales and opposite corners likely see use both for evaluating corner sharpness and for quantifying the level of pincushion or barrel in the projection -- in some lenses, these can be adjusted by varying element spacing, as I recall.

A, B, and C zones define how far from the corner you're measuring, and the numbers on the rays are probably used (along with a protractor at the screen?) to specify the actual amount of distortion present.

Edit: if you're curious enough, here's one in original box with manual, and thermometer function checked.
 

AgX

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that value is expressed both in celsius (below) and in farenheit (above).
Thank you! I am an idiot. Read both as °C. Being able to read letters seems benefitial in such thread...
 
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AgX

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In my paper archive I found some more infotmation.
The thing is from 1966 or earlier. That was a time when Kindermann was nearly only busy with photolab stuff and only had 1 projector in production, in contrast to later times.

Kindermann described that thing as:
"Thermical-optical testing device for miniature-format projectors 5x5cm, for measuring slide-temperature, as testing device for slight optical testing, for measuring illumination-density and -spread, testing for sharpness, especially apt for super-slides (4x4cm)."
 
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