Rocketcheese
Member
A pretty good substitute for the punch is making 3/4" x 1.5" tabs out of scrap film, punching a 1/4" hole in the ends and taping them to the edge of a negative. An office paper punch works. I do not know if you can still buy individual pins from a printers supply.
Only the punching pattern is different
It isn't, the main difference (I think) is that one is Eastman Kodak and the other Kodak Ltd (and there are others from Billows Protocol etc on the same spacing).
Depends on how small you need to go, Bob. All my own micro-pin sheet film-sized (up to 8X10) registration gear was either made by Condit or myself. My mid sized gear came from Ternes Burton in the US Midwest - excellent service. They can also make pin bars for almost any punch system if you submit them a dimensionally stable punched sample, preferably on thin brass shim stock, or else thick mylar.
Larger diam. punch patterns generally have a combination of round and oval indexing pins, anywhere from 3 to 12 or more. Generally, tolerances need to be within .002 inch. But certain processes, like gum printing, simply can't hold that tightness of detail anyway.
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