Posts: 2211
From: New York City, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
posted April 20, 2010 08:07 AM
Someone did do it but not a forum member here. There was one on Ebay a few years back which had extended arms kind of. Unfortunately the way this was done was certain modifications to the chassis had to be done, ie: cut away parts of the plastic. It didn't look too good. But I lost the auction and another member here got it shortly after and then the machine died. I happened to purchase the 1.0 lens off of him but in the end I sold my Sankyo 800 as well.
Posts: 2211
From: New York City, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
posted April 20, 2010 12:20 PM
Ha ha! I wish. Then I would let you have it! But I sold it to another collector in Italy I think. I had 2 of them actually. The second one I tried to fit on the GS1200, Bauer T610, or the Beaulieu. It wouldn't fit any of them. Sad too because its such a nice lens and very well made. And it makes a big difference in picture quality. But I'm sure you know that. Good luck!
Posts: 977
From: Ortona, Italy
Registered: Jan 2004
posted April 23, 2010 04:53 PM
Hi, Michael It's certainly doable, but as Alan explained, you have to cut away a little piece of plastic from the body right next to the area where the film is fed to the upper sprocket. You can have a look (click here and scroll down - there are several photos), or the bigger reel will rub against it causing noise.
Also you need a longer arm for the take up reel: if you can find a spare supply reel arm (even from cheaper models, included 301) it will work perfectly. Of course you won't be able to fold both arms perfectly flat on top of the prj.
quote: Also you need a longer arm for the take up reel: if you can find a spare supply reel arm (even from cheaper models, included 301) it will work perfectly. Of course you won't be able to fold both arms perfectly flat on top of the prj.
I just tried this with using a Sankyo 600 as the donor for the take up reel arm. It absolutely does not work (which I found out after a few hours of tinkering/destruction). If anyone knows which arms would work, please let me know, I now have two PJs in pieces
Posts: 4486
From: Brussels, Belgium
Registered: Jun 2013
posted December 10, 2013 04:17 AM
I have a converted (but not by myself) Sankyo 700. I don't know if this model differs a lot from the Sankyo 800. It seems quiete easy for someone who has some abilities and proper tools.
Posts: 184
From: Chorley, Lancashire, England
Registered: Dec 2008
posted December 10, 2013 04:46 AM
I have recently bought one of these projectors and I'm delighted with it. The gentleman who sold it to me, who's very knowledgeable about projectors was sure it could be modified to take the 1200ft spools. He showed me that the larger spool would easily fit on the feed arm and his suggestion was to cut away a small section of the body to make it take the larger take up spool. If this could be done without harming the projector, I think this would be preferable to buying an Elmo, they seem to have a poor reputation for scratching film. MIKE
Posts: 2941
From: Croydon, London, UK
Registered: Aug 2004
posted December 10, 2013 05:08 AM
"Elmos seem to have a poor reputation for scratching film."
That's news to me - they certainly haven't been scratching my films in recent decades! Maybe there are one or two specific models with 'issues', but scratching would generally be associated with letting certain guides get excessively worn - something that members here would be be alert to. However, I would acknowledge that runnimng Elmos in reverse is risky without one or two refinements to stop marks.
Posts: 184
From: Chorley, Lancashire, England
Registered: Dec 2008
posted December 10, 2013 12:05 PM
Hi Adrian, perhaps I was a little hard on Elmos, but not much. If you search the forum for elmo scratch you end up with a shed load of results. The point I was trying to make was that the sanyo seems to be very kind to film. MIKE
Posts: 1373
From: Penistone Sheffield UK
Registered: Oct 2012
posted December 11, 2013 04:47 AM
I had ST1200 that was good most of the time with films. My GS1200 is also OK. I didn't own the ST long enough to get it serviced, but my GS was serviced by C.Z Scientific Instruments then Hanimex who took over the servicing.
I would think no matter which projector you have, if you don't keep it clean it will at sometime cause scratching.
I always clean my projectors first with a small vacuum cleaner, brush and finally a blast of compressed air.
-------------------- I love the smell of film in the morning.
posted December 11, 2013 09:20 PM
My Sankyo 800 destroyed a reel, big green emulsion scratches due to a bit of rust on the studs on the gate. Any projector can scratch the crap out of film if not looked after
Posts: 977
From: Ortona, Italy
Registered: Jan 2004
posted December 11, 2013 11:47 PM
Pete, as I said, you can use the front arm of a model 301, 401, 501 etc, except 600. The longer arm will allow using 1200' spools without having to modify the rear film guide or the lamp cover.