Author
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Topic: New to the world of 16mm films!
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Charles Foyle
Junior
Posts: 6
From: Florence, SC, USA
Registered: Sep 2018
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posted September 05, 2018 08:14 PM
Hello, collectors of Movies. My name is Charles, I don't know what I'm doing here, and I love vintage things in general.
Usually I collect vintage fountain pens, prewar typewriters and hand-cranked gramophones, phonographs,and Victrolas. However, at an estate sale, I came upon a dusty old 16mm projector sitting in an attic with a few old films and cans.
The machine is a Keystone L-951 "Moviegraph" in pearl gray marble, and holds 400' reels. I even found the original takeup reel from the machine! There was a Mickey Mouse cartoon from the 1930s burned in half and a 50' Castle Films wartime reel that might be WWII, or, based on the Brodie helmets, WWI.
So anyhow, since I love restoration and silent movies, I decided to shell out a princely $20 and go home with my own antique silent film projector.
So far I have gotten the machinery turning--had to remove all moving parts, polish the shafts with 6000-grit abrasives, oil, and reassemble. I washed the exterior in Ballistol gun cleaner hoping it would leave the nitrocellulose clearcoats intact. It worked perfectly and my Moviegraph looks indecently minty for such a cheap tinplate projector.
If I can add a new drive belt and some fresh films I'll be off to the races!
So how do I start collecting 16mm films? I don't want to do sound films, as I am a silent buff, and I also considered shooting my own if I can scrounge an old crank camera and get that running.
As I said, I know nothing about the world of 16mm other than what I read on the Internet. But this is fun! I shot a frame or two onto the wall and it is super clear and fresh for such old equipment and films, and my Moviegraph is clicking over nicely when I spin the flywheel. (Needs a drive belt...gonna use a big O ring.)
Any ideas on getting started?
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Charles Foyle
Junior
Posts: 6
From: Florence, SC, USA
Registered: Sep 2018
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posted September 07, 2018 11:14 PM
Update:
I went to the neighborhood hardware store and five dollars later, I had a pair of springs that became my drive belt. (Love being down South and going to the small town businesses!)
Tonight, for the first time in over half a century, I got the machinery in fighting trim.
The threading isn't as hard as it seems it should be...
I ran a 40-watt Edison type bulb instead of the General Electric original, to avoid toasting a film in case of malfunction.
Lights! Quick, focus the lenses--appears we have a picture. Frame it up, pull the handle--
The motor hums, straining to break in a very stiff drive belt. The flywheel jerks, turns over, spins a couple times. Down under the cowling the cooling fan begins to roar like the MGM lion.
Suddenly the projector becomes a rattling blur of light and cogwheels, the smell of hot oil strong in the air like an inflammable autumn. On the wall, flickering slowly at first and finally reaching 16 frames per second, is a sepia fragment of a World War II newsreel.
Keystone Moviegraph Model L-951, cheap junk par excellance, is back.
Time for some movies. Best of all--
NOW I KNOW WHY THERE IS AN ENTIRE FORUM ON THE INTERNET FOR PROJECTORS AND OLD MOVIES--
BECAUSE THEY'RE FUN!
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