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Topic: Fujica ZC 1000 Single 8
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Luigi Castellitto
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 715
From: Campobasso, Italy
Registered: Jun 2013
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posted June 02, 2014 04:38 PM
http://www.super8.nl/ is very effcient, he's an expert and kind, and still has a well-equipped laboratory; in Europe is a great reference point.
http://film.club.ne.jp/: I've never tried it, it seems to me that the english website is not very complete, but it seems he still has the tape for splicer and Cinevia Single8 50D, which in Europe there is no more (and now over even the 64T ). You buy from them? How are you doing with this shop?
Andec, of course, from it i purchase fom my 8mm cameras, but a few days site is down. http://film.club.ne.jp/
Thank you, Joerg!
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Luigi Castellitto
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 715
From: Campobasso, Italy
Registered: Jun 2013
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posted June 25, 2014 05:13 AM
Joerg, I wanted to ask: with the 8mm, Super 8 and 9.5mm I use standard photographic filters, the type Wratten 80A to shoot indoor with my halogen lamp 3400K and daylight films. Then I use various ND filters to darken the image when there is too much light (variable shutter on cameras excluded). Obviously I use the right diameter for the various cameras, also using ring adapters.
About the ZC1000:
- With the use of daylight film in indoor, it's okay the usual use of 3400K halogen lamp and filter Wratten 80A (the blue one)? To do this, I can buy a normal photographic filter just the right size for the lens of ZC1000 (62mm)?
- I would also use ND filters (4, 8, 16, etc..), when I don't use the variable shutter of the Fuji camera. Also in this case goes well a normal photographic filter (ND 4, 8, ...) with a diameter of 62mm or Fujica requires something specific?
Thank you!
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Joerg Polzfusz
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 815
From: Berlin, Germany, Europe, Earth, Solar System
Registered: Apr 2006
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posted June 30, 2014 05:18 AM
quote: Joerg, I wanted to ask: with the 8mm, Super 8 and 9.5mm I use standard photographic filters, the type Wratten 80A to shoot indoor with my halogen lamp 3400K and daylight films.
This depends on the film! For the current daylight films 80A is the correct choice. (There are also similar filters like 80B,...!)
However in most cases the halogen lamp most likely isn't the only light-source (sun shining through the windows,...). So you'll end up with a "mixed light". And with most films this "mixed light" will result in "good enough" images without any filter. However when your halogen lamp is the only source (or by far the strongest one), then I would definitely use the 80A.
quote: Then I use various ND filters to darken the image when there is too much light (variable shutter on cameras excluded). Obviously I use the right diameter for the various cameras, also using ring adapters.
Using the 80A you'll end up not having to any ND-filter.
quote: With the use of daylight film in indoor, it's okay the usual use of 3400K halogen lamp and filter Wratten 80A (the blue one)? To do this, I can buy a normal photographic filter just the right size for the lens of ZC1000 (62mm)?
Yes.
quote: - I would also use ND filters (4, 8, 16, etc..), when I don't use the variable shutter of the Fuji camera. Also in this case goes well a normal photographic filter (ND 4, 8, ...) with a diameter of 62mm or Fujica requires something specific?
Any M62-filter will do (as the ZC1000 uses the default pitch for M62,...).
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Luigi Castellitto
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 715
From: Campobasso, Italy
Registered: Jun 2013
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posted June 30, 2014 05:51 AM
quote:Joerg, I wanted to ask: This depends on the film! For the current daylight films 80A is the correct choice. (There are also similar filters like 80B,...!) However in most cases the halogen lamp most likely isn't the only light-source (sun shining through the windows,...). So you'll end up with a "mixed light". And with most films this "mixed light" will result in "good enough" images without any filter. However when your halogen lamp is the only source (or by far the strongest one), then I would definitely use the 80A. ------------------------------------------------------ Yes, of course I meant with the color film, and with the b/w just usually go, for example, from 100 Asa to 80 Asa, from 200 Asa to 160 Asa and so it goes. You have done well to remember the variation that may give lights from the windows and the like, but I use only the light of the Lamp, trying to close all other light sources.
By the way, what do you think about the use of 80B with the 3400K? Because all recommend 3400K+Wratten 80A, but the 80A it would be more suitable for the 3200k, while the 80B for 3400k!
quote: Using the 80A you'll end up not having to any ND-filter. ----------------- In this case I meant outdoors. In indoor, rightly 80A already deducts two stops...
quote: Yes. ----------------------------------------------------- Thank you!
quote:- Any M62-filter will do (as the ZC1000 uses the default pitch for M62,...). --------------------------------------------------------------- Thank you!
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Luigi Castellitto
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 715
From: Campobasso, Italy
Registered: Jun 2013
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posted July 27, 2014 04:30 PM
The time was a bit 'ruined the operation of the FRAM COUNTER (in zc 1000 it's "digital", that works together with the variable shutter lever) which always runs well, very smooth, but they happen to have the hitch (very rare), the numbers at stop counter do not appear complete to little glass but stopped in half (rare), and especially if I reset the counter (with shutter lever in this Fujica) does not come out "000" but numbers at random. I can't try to fix it from the outside of camera? I tried to make it run at maximum speed, minimum, back and forward, by tilting the camera in different ways, but nothing... I would not open the camera just for that, so I ask: is a problem that remains within the frame counter? I can be sure it will not affect to the rest of functions? Because, if so, I use frame by counting even with those problems (adding when not reset, little looking if it crashes, etc.). Thank you!
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