Author
|
Topic: 300 Watts Considered Sufficient
|
Maurice Leakey
Film God
Posts: 5895
From: Bristol. United Kingdom
Registered: Oct 2007
|
posted December 05, 2013 03:31 AM
Pre-war British sound projectors were usually fitted with a 300 watt lamp. I was reminded of this today when checking a newly purchased print of a Mickey Mouse cartoon from 1932 "The Wayward Canary". The print was quite light in density which was necessary in the 30s and early 40s for projectors which had low output lamps. The date code of LL revealed it was a GB print of 1940.
This could have only originally come from one source, the GeBescope Film Library. Their 1941 catalogue lists 24 Disney cartoons including this, number B.110. The hire fee was 5/- plus 20% Purchase Tax for one day, private use only, it was not available for public exhibition.
I suddenly realised that I might once have paid 3d to see this very print. In the 40s my school showed educational films each week for which a charge was made, the highlight of the show was a Walt Disney cartoon.
The headmaster's pride and joy was a superb projector which was housed in a polished wood cabinet (blimp) case. It had a maltese cross mechanism and was called a "SP Wundatone". Made in the UK by Sales Producers Equipments Ltd it had a 300 watt, 100 volt lamp. Even in a partially darkened classroom I recall that the picture was quite adequate on an 8 feet white screen.
On the last day of term before each Christmas we had a proper feature film. I still have memories of "49th Parallel", "The Scarlet Pimpernel", and still my all-time favourite, "Oh! Mr Porter". [ December 05, 2013, 01:55 PM: Message edited by: Maurice Leakey ]
-------------------- Maurice
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
|
|
|