Author
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Topic: Calling all Eumig S938 experts - Mechanical trouble
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Ronald Kwiatkowski
Film Handler
Posts: 67
From: Luxemburg
Registered: Nov 2012
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posted December 19, 2012 07:30 AM
Hi everybody, I got this nice Eumig S938 from ebay, and there is a bit of mending to do. I am however not the expert mechanic, so I'll tell the symptoms and what I see from here. Everything starts fine, I did pass a 200-feet cartoon, which played well, only the sound would weep slightly. When I tried to pass a 400-footer, the machine started rattling halfway through, the picture wouldn't stand still, sound was weeping heavily. Frame rate seemed to lower, so I tried the frame rate button. It is supposed to go smoothly from 24 to 18 frames and back. However frame rate dropped down considerably, something like 3 frames a second. When I cranked it back to 24, it more or less gained normal speed again, I suppose around 20 frames. I opened the machine front and back, and saw the source of the rattling, which seemed to be quite inaccessible. As I said I'm not the expert, and my vocabulary may be inadequate. Front view, left side, next to the frame rate button. I think it is the main "axis-thingy" coming out of the motor, (the axis which gets that broad belt to turn down to the big wheels). The axis-thingy is vibrating (like being pulled up and down), the more and heftier the later in the movie. I suppose that vibrating explains all the other symptoms, the weeping sound, the fact that the picture doesn't stand still. What else? Oh, the button in the back (which you use to manually transport the film), I noticed that it can be "clicked" in (working) and out (not working), I'm not sure if this is supposed that way. Also the frame rate button can be pushed in, it changes speed, but I can't figure to what purpose or if it is supposed to happen at all. Filmpath was cleaned by me with alcohol, and I dusted the insides. Belt seems fine. I have not applied any grease or stuff anywhere.
I will have a look with a friend mechanic and super 8 lover, but in the meantime, maybe one you has pinpointed the exact and uncostly solution.
Thanks an awful lot, help me get Christmas back Ronald
-------------------- Vinegar belongs in the salad...
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Ronald Kwiatkowski
Film Handler
Posts: 67
From: Luxemburg
Registered: Nov 2012
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posted December 21, 2012 04:49 PM
Thanks an awful lot, Maurizio. I did as described, cleaned from old grease, applied new grease, cleaned and sanded the discs. Worked very fine, until the very end of a 600-footer, when the problem slightly reappeared. So I'll check the greasing again, I may have missed something. I'm not too keen on sanding the discs again, as I read in another thread, the rubber might come off too much. Somebody said something about a spring that's too tight, but apparently it's difficult to adjust it. Well, anyhow here's the punchline: the fan for the lamp isn't working, at all. The fuse seems ok though. Surely enough, the lamp bit the dust, this very evening (it must have been old though, intensity wasn't that great). Any ideas what might be wrong with the fan? Thanks again
-------------------- Vinegar belongs in the salad...
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Maurizio Di Cintio
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 977
From: Ortona, Italy
Registered: Jan 2004
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posted December 22, 2012 01:47 PM
Hi, guys! I agree with the last two posts, especially as regards the motor pulley might need some cleaning. Use alcohol but try not to touch the rubber discs. The lamp cooing fan might be stuck, like Hugh suggested: try hei remedies. Should they not suffice, the motor might nìbe burnt, but it shouldn't be so serious; after all it looks like a rather common DC micromotor; try determinig its voltage by using a multitester, and get a new one from a tape deck servicing facility that might fit in the machine as regards size and performance. Keep us posted, Ronald, and good luck.
-------------------- Maurizio
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