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Topic: Sync for Eumig's
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Steve Klare
Film Guy
Posts: 7016
From: Long Island, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
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posted April 25, 2006 06:40 PM
Hi Mike,
You are right, the projector Lipton used had a 1/f switch (reed switch). I think he paid a photo shop to do the mod, but it's actually pretty simple and you can get the stuff at Radio Shack for a few bucks! (good luck finding somebody to do the mod these days regardless!)
The title is literally "The Super-8 Book". (You might suspect the guy who wrote "Puff the Magic Dragon" could come up with a little zippier title!) I have a copy among my books somewhere and read it cover to cover a few years back. I found it was an excellent overview of Super-8, especially as it stood in the mid 1970s. I bought it back when it was still being printed.
I've been looking for that article, but had no luck so far. I fear it may not have survived my last computer upgrade. I'll keep looking, though! The theory is pretty simple, I bet I can re-construct it if need be.
-------------------- All I ask is a wide screen and a projector to light her by...
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Steve Klare
Film Guy
Posts: 7016
From: Long Island, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
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posted April 25, 2006 07:54 PM
Excellent! We have one from Albertson, one from East Northport and one from Setauket! Long Island loves this topic!
I figured out what happened to that article. It was actually a link to a .pdf in the "Super-8 Militia" website, which is now pretty much gone.
It goes something like this: a small (and lightweight for balance) magnet is epoxied to the side of the shaft that the shutter is mounted on. A reed switch is mounted to a home made bracket close enough to the shaft that each time the magnet comes around, its magnetic field will cause the switch to close and then open as the magnet rotates away. Two wires were run out to some kind of phone jack for interface to the outside world.
For purposes such as syncronising a camera to the projector for duplicating footage without flicker, it's important that everything is set up to provide a switch closure at the exact same instant that the projector shutter is in an open position. I don't think it matters as much for sync sound.
Now, this is only one step towards the setup that Lenny Lipton used. We don't have crystal sync, and finding a fullcoat recorder and film these days is like buying leaded gasoline!
Anything that is doable these days involves digital media. I'll leave that to more knowledgable people! [ April 25, 2006, 08:57 PM: Message edited by: Steve Klare ]
-------------------- All I ask is a wide screen and a projector to light her by...
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