scheimfluger_77
Member
A 3x4 Graphlex back and 5 3x4 film holders. Kind of regretting it since I'll need to adapt it to something...
Well boo! It turns out the 3x4 Graflex back was actually a 2x3. I will have to return and keep looking.A 3x4 Graphlex back and 5 3x4 film holders. Kind of regretting it since I'll need to adapt it to something...
An Ibsor shutter, I have a nice Lack Rathenow triplet with a falty shutter. It's a Press shutter that preceded the Prontor (Press).
Ian
16x20 Foma Fomabrom Variant 123 paper
135-36 film Fomapan 200
120 film Fomapan 200
ADOX FX-39 developer, 3 bottles. Going for super sharp and grainy.
I am curious how FX-39 go with Foma. Rodinal 1+25 is indeed very good for Foma if I watch the development times.
Well, last Saturday, I made yet another find at one of my favorite sources of slide projectors - the Toledo DeVeaux Goodwill. The Atlas-Warner Model 66 "Super Screen" slide viewer (I beg to differ with them, technically, it's a rear-screen slide projector) has beautiful mid/late 1960s lines, cost me $6, and won't take up much space. Slide a clasp under the handle at the top and pull out the hinged front, and it reveals a projector (with 50 watt BLX lamp) aimed at a mirror (at an angle) that projects an image of the slide on the translucent screen. Place a stack of slides upside-down into the integral stackloader (which works very well) and easily change slides with a pull and a push. The little white cap by the stackloader is a push/pull focus knob. Surprise is that the projected image is very sharp. Ingenious part of the design is the plastic panel that blocks unwanted light from behind the model 66 when in use slides through a slot on the front to become a shield protecting the screen when closed.
Before I could get around to posting that, lightning struck twice in the same place on Wednesday afternoon. I was trying to burn time between getting out of work and the evening start of the Detroit Stereographic Society meeting when I noticed the D.A.V. Thrift Store in Westland. First thing I noticed was the Bell & Howell Headliner 706 projector. When I opened the cover and pulled the changer arm, the advance gear did not move as I had expected, and I figured the changer was broken. Then I noticed a shaft on the underside of the changer and noticed that the end of the changer knob is a knurled nob. The 706 has (B&H's own description) a semi-automatic changer. To use this changer, one pulls out the changer arm, and turns the knob at the end one click to advance the tray (TDC/Universal type) before pushing the next slide in. This design actually has an advantage - with the changer arm pulled out, one can advance or retreat to ANY slide in the tray (rather than pulling the knob in-and-out 35 times to go from slide 1 to slide 36, as in an Airequipt changer). The optics and workmanship on this appear to be superb. It has some dirt issues. It takes some time for the fan to get up to speed, and the covering on the cabinet (despite appearance, it is actually vinyl) somehow became discolored on the base, but not on the top cover. This was $ 5.98. The brand name is appropriate in my case - If my daughter finds out I brought yet another slide projector home, she'll bawl & howl!
In another room of the same store was a Kodak Moviedeck 455 8mm/Super 8 movie projector. I've been using a 435 for a few years, but the 455 is an upgrade. It allows projection at 18 or 5 fps, both in forward or reverse, as well as a still setting (the 435 is 18fps forward only), an integral screen that pulls out of the front (I don't know how often I'll use this), and, most importantly, a zoom lens, which somehow provides an image that is both larger and brighter than the lens on the 435 did. Somewhere along the decades (since June or July of 1975 - CAMEROSITY code YSSR in the serial number), some idiot decided they did not like the dust cover and broke it off at one end - not knowing or caring that the cover could be removed by pulling it upward past a pair of springs (for me the solution was to swap the dust cover of my 435 with it). For those not familiar with Moviedecks, they are sprocket-drive projectors where the feed reel lies flat on the top of the projector (like a phonograph record), the film path makes a quarter twist before going through the gate, and another quarter twist before being spooled into a built-in take-up reel inside the bottom of the projector. I'll be keeping the 435 as a spare (if something goes wrong with the 455, I can use its zoom lens on my 435). This only cost me $ 2.24 because it was "green sticker day".
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