Posts: 96
From: Christchurch UK
Registered: Jan 2007
posted December 02, 2010 12:15 PM
On my super 8 machine, Bolex Sound 715, why does it take 10secs of actual film to play before the sound starts and when the film has ended it takes 10seconds for the sound to end, this is on home movies I am refering to. If I copy the film to hard drive and then move the sound track back 10seconds it does not lip sync with the picture. I take it that it is because of the length of film between the gate and the sound heads, if this is so then it means that home movie films are always silent for the first 10seconds, Am I correct?
Posts: 96
From: Christchurch UK
Registered: Jan 2007
posted December 03, 2010 06:19 AM
Steve One film was 10seconds and another is 7seconds and both are in lip-sync all the way through. most unusual I imagine. Could it be depending on what camera was used to capture the footage, I did notice they were useing a seperate mic on a lead but don't know if it was attached to the camera or a seperate recorder, the films have two sound tracks.
Posts: 7016
From: Long Island, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
posted December 03, 2010 08:11 AM
OK, This is starting to make sense.
To me is seems like the sound was originally recorded on a seperate recorder and then synced up later. It's the only way I can think of to explain that long gap.
Years ago I had ideas of recording sound seperate system, getting the film striped and then recording the track on the stripe. By the time I understood all the complications of it (especially the extra equipment to lug around) it started to sound like too much work to be any kind of fun. (Supposed to be a hobby, after all.)
Lip-sync starts to imply scripts and actors of some kind and I can't imagine getting that level of cooperation out of most people I know.
(-Easier just to buy films!)
-------------------- All I ask is a wide screen and a projector to light her by...
Posts: 815
From: Berlin, Germany, Europe, Earth, Solar System
Registered: Apr 2006
posted December 08, 2010 03:39 AM
quote: The gap between gate and heads is 18 frames: 1 second at 18 FPS and 3/4 Second at 24 FPS.
The gap for Standard 8 is 54 frames. That's 3s at 18 fps and 2 1/4s at 24 fps. Some "dual gauge projectors" (Standard8 and Super8/Single8) are using this distance for both formats, e.g. some Heurtier-projectors. According to the manual, your projector is using the "18 frames gap" as defined for Super8. However the sound might have been recorded on such a "dual gauge projector".
A completely different idea: It looks like your projector has got a "fade"-option for the sound. When enabled it might reduce the volume long enough to make you think that there's no sound at the start.