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Topic: Elmo running a bit slow
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Steve Klare
Film Guy
Posts: 7016
From: Long Island, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
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posted January 15, 2016 01:59 PM
I battled breaking the 24 FPS barrier with my ST-1200HD for years, and I am finally there.
For years I thought the gradual speed-up was because of slippage on the shutter wheel, but if you think about it, how consistent would that slippage need to be for the sound to be at all good? (How smooth is your car in a skid?) I expect it would grab and let go and the sound would be full of wow and flutter. I actually replaced the rubber on the shutter wheel, but still think the contact was good enough even on bare metal.
The root of all evil here is definitely lubrication. It's the whole reason the thing gradually moseys up to speed: the old stuff is thick with dust and emulsion and it takes a couple of minutes of agitation for it to warm up enough to soften and let things turn easily.
This is especially true of the lube on the worm gear: I literally unwound hair several inches long from the spirals of at least two of my machines. Who's been sticking their heads in there I have no idea!
So when I did a thorough lube, did I get up to 24?
(ummmm)....No!
-and here's the reason:
(I just happened to have this in my desk drawer...no, I don't know why either...)
This is my old motor pulley. It is worn right through the bottom of the sheave. (!)
How it got that way is this: In olden days when I started the machine there was this thin squealing sound for about 20 seconds. I assumed it was the roller slipping on the shutter wheel. I now know it was my motor belt slipping on the pulley and gradually wearing through the bottom of the sheave. (See where sticking to a theory too long can land you?)
-and why did this happen?
Lubrication!
(-or the need for it...)
That slippage was because the old lube made the machinery stiff enough to force the belt to slip.
Once I lubed the machine, this stopped, but it was too late. The wear on the pulley means the effective diameter is smaller and what would pass for a "gear ratio" (if this was a gear) now allows the machine to operate slower at the correct motor speed.
I could have the best lube humanly possible, but with the pulley worn down in diameter like that the math just couldn't work out to 24 FPS.
With the new pulley I am at a consistent 24 FPS: the pitches of my sound tracks are consistent with all my other machines, both AC and DC motored. The "warm up" is faster than the time it takes me to stuff the leader into the feed end of the path.
-so if you have this problem, definitely do a lube. While you are in there give the motor pulley a good look and make sure it's a nice "V" profile and not worn round and deep like this one.
If you hear that squeal, stop!
-it's a cry for help! [ January 15, 2016, 03:02 PM: Message edited by: Steve Klare ]
-------------------- All I ask is a wide screen and a projector to light her by...
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