Posts: 2110
From: Loganville, Georgia, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
posted July 24, 2005 02:11 PM
Thinking outside the donut, I thought it would interesting to find out what materials and methods people use to clean their projector's film paths. How do you clean thoses hard to get to places on a B&H 1500 series for instance. An Eiki SLL-O is more acessible I think.
posted July 24, 2005 02:50 PM
Dunno about a B&H 1500... incidentally I just picked up an Eiki SSL-0 on eBay which will be here tomorrow but back on topic... for my Elmo ST-1200HD I arm myself with Goo-Gone and a few Q-tips, and get down and dirty... well, down and clean I should say
-------------------- Call me Phoenix. *dusts off the ashes*
Posts: 1628
From: Savage, MN, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
posted July 26, 2005 12:46 PM
for my ST1200HD i use film cleaner or rubbing alcohol with a qtip swab and run it along the path of the film and across the sound head and especially by the gate area that swings open, the same on my Eiki- SSL 16mm one the gate pops out for easy cleaning on that one.
-------------------- jim schrader "Let's see “do I have that title already?"
posted July 26, 2005 06:29 PM
Rubbing alcohol? Not by any chance the stuff that's 30% alcohol and 70% pure water?? I did that once, (forgetting about the alcohol/water mix), then ran a film through and watched in horror at large brown splotches all over the projected image. I hurried to rewind the film and properly cleaned it to prevent any lasting water damage... after that I re-cleaned the entire film path with Goo-Gone (which seems safe to use as a film cleaner also). I'm assuming you let the cleaned sections dry before using your projector?
P.S. since you're bringing up the Eiki SSL-0, I wonder if you know where I can get a copy of the user's manual for mine (it arrived yesterday). There doesn't seem to be a downloadable copy either on film-tech.com or the filmshooting forums.
-------------------- Call me Phoenix. *dusts off the ashes*
Posts: 2110
From: Loganville, Georgia, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
posted July 26, 2005 09:58 PM
Don't use alcohol on rubber parts. It can cause the rubber to expand. I use smelly old rubber cleaner. I clean magnetic heads with head cleaner and Film Renew for the film path and film.
You might be able to find an owner's manual for the Eiki at Urbanskifilms .com
Posts: 1336
From: United Kingdom
Registered: Jun 2003
posted July 27, 2005 03:14 AM
Dan,
I thought I read somewhere that Filmrenew is not safe on plastic and that you should use metal reels to put film on when treating? Is that the case and if so do you risk the guides with long term use?
posted July 27, 2005 07:24 PM
FilmRenew will weaken and discolor plastic if you soak film (on plastic reels) in a container filled with the cleaner (for several days, that is)... but if you just run film through a cloth soaked in FilmRenew, using a plastic reel to wind the film up is OK (although I've experienced minor spots of discoloration on some of my reels, but then these were very old reels anyway, and already showing signs of use).
-------------------- Call me Phoenix. *dusts off the ashes*
Posts: 2110
From: Loganville, Georgia, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
posted July 28, 2005 05:23 PM
Hi, Tony, Jan's right about soaking. Only use a metal reel when soaking a film in Film Renew. As far as cleaning the film path, I think it's safe because it evaporates fairly quick. I've been using it on my projectors for about four years and haven't noticed any deterioration. This is one of the reasons I made this post. I would like to know if there is a better way to clean film paths.
Posts: 67
From: Aston, Pa. USA
Registered: Dec 2003
posted July 28, 2005 05:27 PM
I have been using Isopropyl Alcohol (91%) and q-tips for 25 years on the first Elmo ST 1200 I owned, as well as on the other 14 or so projectors I acquired since 1980. They get a thorough going over every few months, depending on usage. (I would never run a film through them with any chance of moist alcohol residue--wait a bit for evaporation.) I also use canned air and a soft brush after every reel that runs through the projectors. As important, with the Super 8 magnetics, I demagnetize the sound heads periodically.
posted July 29, 2005 02:47 PM
I have a nifty little soft brush attached to a squeezy baggie kind of thing (what do you call this thing?) - I push and it blows air right through the brush hairs. I have no idea how long I've had it or where/how I got it, but it's proven itself indispensable.
-------------------- Call me Phoenix. *dusts off the ashes*
posted July 30, 2005 01:02 PM
Come to think of it... way back in Germany, early 1990s, my Mom and I were in this photo shop downtown. They still had some super-8 items that they were more or less clearing out... and there was one huge kit of just about everything for film editing - leaders, tails, animation strips to intercut with your film, antimagnetic precision scissors, lens wipes... and the "puff puff" was part of that kit, I think. I remember that the guy sold that kit to me for maybe $5 back then.
As for where you can find one like mine... I don't know. Maybe you can find it on eBay looking in the crafts or toys/hobbies listing pages...
-------------------- Call me Phoenix. *dusts off the ashes*