Very interesting! That's what was missing from this whole debate. A seemingly simple and precise device to check the measuring equipment.
How is the disc driven? It has to be speed-controlled, right? How did you calibrate it?
A common drill spins the wheel. Math was used to calculate the circumfrence at which the velocity was the same velocity as the focal plane shutter. The slits were made 'pie-shaped' with projection slide cropping tape, like a cine camera focal plane shutter, so that if the measuring point was not exactly at the 'correct' circumference, the shutter speed will not change.
The RPM of the drill was measured by attaching a flag to the drill and measuring the time for ten spikes on the screen and dividing by ten.
During the test recordings of the waveforms, the drill speed was double checked, again measuring the time for ten revolutions and dividing by ten.
Nominal speeds are printed on the wheel, but to be exact this wheel shown gives 1/240, 1/480, 1/960 because the cameras I was testing synch at 1/60 (not 1/64) and then half the frame distance with each increment in shutter speed.
But for testing a shutter tester you can make the slits any width and any RPM as long as you know the slit width and RPM you can calculate the rest.
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