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Topic: Chinon C-300 judder problem
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frank arnstein
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 534
From: Gold Coast. Australia
Registered: Jan 2005
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posted September 30, 2009 05:01 AM
Hi Warton & John,
I have got a Chinon C-200 here in front of me. It has been sent in because it has a judder in forwards project. If it drops a loop while projecting it won't respond to the loop resetter, but it runs Ok in reverse.
After a very thorough look at this very clean looking machine, I discovered that it has a bowed film pressure plate. These are a light plate & can be easily bent or bowed. I suspect its had the lens holder slammed shut at some stage & it wont sit flat in the gate as its distorted now. Easy enough to straighten in your fingers and check against a rule to make sure its flat again.
Make sure the claw tip retreats just beneath the aperture plate surface, before resuming its upward travel. Observe it by hand rotating the shuttershaft. If it needs adjusting for more depth, a small pair of screws holds the shutter to the shuttershaft. If you loosen them, the shutter can then be slid along the shuttershaft to give more or less claw penetration into the film.
Let us know whether you find anything amiss or awry..
dogtor pufferfish
Post Operative report Sunday 4th on the Chinon C-200.
After straightening the bowed pressure plate, the faulty loop restorer is now functioning again beautifully. No more judder at all. The picture is sharp and it projects well at all speeds & in both directions without loosing a loop during a whole 400' reel.
Yippee.....
I have conquered this beast by using my brain & feel very satisfied over the victory. Hope you win too.
dogtor pufferfish [ October 04, 2009, 07:46 AM: Message edited by: frank arnstein ]
-------------------- At Projector Heaven the Focus is always on Detail.
____ [o:/o]<|=- dogtor@projectorheaven.com.au //``\\ -----------------------------------------------
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frank arnstein
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 534
From: Gold Coast. Australia
Registered: Jan 2005
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posted October 08, 2009 05:08 AM
Hi Warton, you say.....
"Could not move shutter forward as it appears to have gone as far as it can."
The shutter must be able to move further forward on its shaft. Its held in place by 2 tiny grub screws on the hub, so loosen them both then slide the shutter forwards. It must move if its loosened properly. If you slide it forward too far, the claw will jam, so be ready to slide it back again if needed. Marking its position with black felt tip pen before you move it will make it easier to do slight adjustments. Rotate & recheck the claw tip penetration before locking the grub screws. It could take hours of careful work to get it right but don't give up till you do.
Once you have it moving on the shutter shaft, its a matter of getting the claw to penetrate the film sprocket holes deep enough. Yet it must completely retreat to below the level of the aperture plate before moving up for another pulldown. I set them up by eye & then rotate film through manually. Adjust sideways if needed by using the eccentric cam near the claw pivot.
As for the 1 sec interval between juddering, try applying some grease to all the Spiral steel drive belts behind the rear cover. They deliver drive to the spindles. If they are too dry, they won't slip properly on their hubs, causing a judder as the belt finally slips. It should be smooth slippage. So try lubing them. Not too much though or it may not rewind full reels properly.
Give it another try and report back with any progress to us here in the forum.
dogtor pufferfish [ October 08, 2009, 10:44 AM: Message edited by: frank arnstein ]
-------------------- At Projector Heaven the Focus is always on Detail.
____ [o:/o]<|=- dogtor@projectorheaven.com.au //``\\ -----------------------------------------------
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