Author
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Topic: HELP! cleaning the sides of debris.
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Claus Harding
Phenomenal Film Handler
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Posts: 1149
From: Washington DC
Registered: Oct 2006
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posted December 21, 2009 09:58 AM
Timothy,
Get thee to CVS and get a bottle of 99% isopropyl alcohol. You also want: a can of compressed air with the thin little 'straw' so you can reach in and spray. See if anyone offers a bulk pack of these, as individually they get expensive these days.
For cleaning, I use chamois cloth, which doesn't "lint" on you, and which can be gotten in a sewing-supply store for fairly little (you do want white, so you can see the dirt ) Just buy a yard or two and cut a piece off when you need it.
You should clean after every reel; it is the one way you can help avoid that awful sinking feeling of seeing a scratch suddenly appear on a cherished film. It becomes a habit very quickly.
Open the gate, spray the whole film path with air, and give the gate and pressure plate a quick 'polish' with chamois/alcohol, then a blast of air in the gate area.
Run the lamp with no film, and rack your focus in to see if the light shows any hairs in the gate. 99% of the time, one go is all it takes.
Q-tips with alcohol are handy for cleaning guide parts or transport parts that could have emulsion or splice debris stuck in them, just always blast it with air afterwards, to counteract any 'fuzzies' left behind by the tips.
Claus.
-------------------- "Why are there shots of deserts in a scene that's supposed to take place in Belgium during the winter?" (Review of 'Battle of the Bulge'.)
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