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Topic: 8mm ... " a toy film gauge " ?
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Steve Klare
Film Guy
Posts: 7016
From: Long Island, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
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posted August 06, 2018 09:40 AM
I think for the most part it's the case of the right tool for the job. 16mm has a lot higher resolution and that's important for filling a larger screen. On the other hand, this becomes a smaller and smaller advantage as the screen size goes down. A crappy resolution image looks just fine on a cellphone screen, for example.
All other things being equal, I'd rather have 8mm at the house. The film storage is easier and the machines are half the size. Everything is lighter, the transport is quieter (which matters a lot in a small space like a living room) and zoom lenses make setting up a lot more flexible.
I wouldn't want to try two 16mm machines and setup in my Civic coupe either. We brought one home from CineSea and I thought somebody was going to have to ride up in the cargo pod! (You really need to plan for this kind of thing.)
I haven't really messed around with 16mm sound yet, but I suspect the optical tracks aren't going to amaze me.
What I really like about 16 is the different films available that never saw the light of 8mm. That's the main reason I went into it more than the technical side. If I started out in 16 I imagine I'd do the same thing the other way for this reason.
8mm goes toe to toe with 16 on the big screen down in Wildwood, but to make that happen, it's the better prints with the best lenses and the brightest lamps. You can make a car with a small engine go very fast, but it takes everything being better than the bigger-engined ones. [ August 06, 2018, 10:43 AM: Message edited by: Steve Klare ]
-------------------- All I ask is a wide screen and a projector to light her by...
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