Author
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Topic: ST-800 restoration
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Patrick McGrath
Film Handler
Posts: 97
From: Huntington Beach, CA
Registered: Jul 2008
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posted November 24, 2013 02:57 PM
This past summer I picked up a discarded ST-800 at a used equipment store in Japan. It looked a bit dirty but there was no visible damage and the price tag read 1550 yen, which is around 15 bucks, so I had no excuse. Upon returning home I found the usual gooey belts, but everything else looked good and even the bulb still lit. I immediately ordered a two blade shutter from Reel Image and proceeded to tear down the film path. Last time I did this I came up with a pretty good method for cleaning and resurfacing the plastic pathways. I used some 1000 grit sandpaper where I could detect wear (a good loupe or magnifying glass helps here) and then I used my dremel tool with a soft cloth buffing wheel and a light polishing compound. You have to be very careful not to run the dremel too fast or push too hard as it is easy to melt the plastic out of shape, but with just enough pressure and compound you can eliminate any wear and practically return the parts to new. Most of this wear is pretty small anyway but, to which we can all attest, it doesn't take much to scratch a film. Admittedly, this is a bit tedious but I can't see any other way to avoid the unknowns of a used machine than to do a thorough resurface like this.. Something I noticed about the 800 is that there are two rollers around the first sprocket film loading area where I have not seen on others(I even added the same one on my 180 near the sprocket itself). The next thing I thought about was how to test for scratching after this procedure. I have used the leader method before and have even used a marker to make marks and then check for scratches but it always seems a little hard to be sure at what I am looking. So, I ended up buying some expired cartridges with virgin film inside to run through the projector and then check it for marks. I don't know if there is a difference in the softness of the emulsion prior to developing so I may be a bit off especially if the emulsion is softer after processing but I feel like other than sacrificing what I know to be a pristine, scratchless print for the sake of testing, I thought this was a pretty good alternative. If I go with the assumption that they are the same or close, then I can safely say my ST-800 is now scratch free. I was going to take pictures of the two blade conversion but became so engrossed in it that I forgot all about trying to document it. This will be the second one that I've done now, the other being my ST-180, and I can't imagine not having it now. Both are brighter than my Sankyo 800 which of course has the 150w bulb as compared to the Elmo's 100w. All in all, I'm really happy with the result and paired with my new f1.2 long throw zoom this is the brightest sharpest picture yet for me.
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