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Topic: Inventing a projector
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Adrian Winchester
Film God
Posts: 2941
From: Croydon, London, UK
Registered: Aug 2004
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posted November 07, 2015 07:35 AM
I think the potential feasibility of a new projector - at a (very substantial) price - was supported by that limited production run a very sophisticated new Super 8 camera not very long ago. It sold out, although unfortunately I don't suppose many of the buyers would also want to invest in a new projector. But (e.g.) Elmo and Eiki (if we would welcome a new 16mm projector from them) are still in business, so if we offer them the appropriate technical and design input, plus the enormous sums of money to guarantee that the minimum numbers they stipulate are sold, then it could happen. Getting an eccentric millionaire on board would be highly desirable.
However fanciful, I love the idea of 'state of the art' 8 and 16mm projectors, partly because I'm convinced that the basic remote controls that were being produced for certain Elmo and Eiki models in the 1980s would by now have also incorporated volume and fine focussing adjustments, which I'd have enjoyed doing from an armchair!
-------------------- Adrian Winchester
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Paul Adsett
Film God
Posts: 5003
From: USA
Registered: Jun 2003
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posted November 07, 2015 09:32 AM
I hate to throw cold water on any ideas, but honestly I see no way that this will ever happen. The closest we came to a new super 8 sound projector was the Classic Home Cinema Fumeo about 15 years ago, and we all know what happened to that. It was a well built but bare bones sound machine, with no amplifier and no recording capability, and it cost the earth. None, as far as I know, were ever sold. I think a much better approach is to try to extend the lives of the well known and respected work horse projectors, such as the Elmo's, Eumig's, and Beaulieu's, by trying to find someone willing to take on remanufactured sound heads. Edwin Van Eck is already supplying replacement mechanical parts for many of these great machines, and with new heads they could last another 30 years or more.
-------------------- The best of all worlds- 8mm, super 8mm, 9.5mm, and HD Digital Projection, Elmo GS1200 f1.0 2-blade Eumig S938 Stereo f1.0 Ektar Panasonic PT-AE4000U digital pj
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John Hourigan
Master Film Handler
Posts: 301
From: Colorado U.S.A.
Registered: Sep 2003
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posted November 10, 2015 08:37 AM
I, too, had put in a reservation for this projector. I never understood the vitriol directed at this attempt to bring a new projector to the hobby, particularly when existing projectors at the time were approaching 30-plus years in age.
True, marketing from CHC was zilch (which seems to be the norm, for some reason. One has to learn about these things almost by osmosis, it seems.). But with this experience, and the market being even smaller than it was then, any attempts to produce a new projector are surely doomed from an economics perspective. [ November 10, 2015, 10:10 AM: Message edited by: John Hourigan ]
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