Author
|
Topic: Kodak Sound 8 projector for sale
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Paul Adsett
Film God
Posts: 5003
From: USA
Registered: Jun 2003
|
posted August 28, 2012 06:55 PM
This projector looks very similar to the Kodak M100 projector. The only difference is the reel arrangement - the M100 could take 1200ft reels. Plus the M100 has autothreading. The M100 is a great projector, and the one I had came with a stunning quality f1.0 20 mm lens, which I now use on my Eumig 938.
This is the projector that Kodak designed to showcase the new Super 8mm magnetic sound system on a professional quality projector. It is fitted with that superb, unbelievably sharp and flat field, fixed focus f1.0 Ektar lens. It had auto threading and a rotary knob which was used to totally remove the sound head from the film path for silent films. Lighting was 150 watt halogen with a high and low lamp setting switch. There was an analogue recording level meter and sockets for phono/tape/ microphone input. It has a big internal speaker housed in the wooden rear part of the projector. Plus, as you can see, it takes 1200ft spools. Picture quality, smoothness of running, and steadiness is better than anything I have ever seen on Super 8mm. The machine is built like a tank, being based on the superb 16mm Kodak Pageant design. The down side is sound quality- not nearly as good as the 800 series Eumigs, and uses a hybrid valve/transistor amplifier. But it's a stunner, Kodak's best ever S8 projector, designed and built in Rochester NY in the days before US corporations off loaded everything to the far east, when quality counted for something, and before Kodak became synonymous with cheap plastic projectors and cameras. Goes to show just how much Kodak and America has really lost in the last few decades.
Those surely were the days!
-------------------- 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
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
|
|