Posts: 763
From: Auckland,New Zealand
Registered: Jun 2003
posted August 15, 2016 09:06 PM
Just been having a play with one of these.It does standard and super-quite well,I reckon. Trouble is the speed is 30 fps.Must be some way(yes,I know,buy a more expensive machine!)of modifying this.....
Posts: 763
From: Auckland,New Zealand
Registered: Jun 2003
posted August 16, 2016 05:43 AM
Golly,I was after some 200ft reels to put family flicks on-to be transferred to digital.I found it cheaper to buy boxed 200ft films here-to get the reels,than it was to buy empty reels in the USA.Even though the reels I was looking at on the bay were only $4.50 each. Humungous postal fees made them very expensive reels!
Posts: 339
From: Minneapolis, MN, USA
Registered: Apr 2016
posted August 17, 2016 10:06 AM
If it's the one I've seen, various incarnations have been around for a few years. It works by capturing stills of the film you feed through manually. You have to use software to stitch the images back into a movie.
Posts: 763
From: Auckland,New Zealand
Registered: Jun 2003
posted August 19, 2016 11:00 PM
That is right Ty.I've scanned my old late 50s-early 60s wedding-type Standard 8mm 50fters. It works well.On Quicktime Player, 30fps is a bit disconcerting but with iMovie or Google Drive,speed can be altered satisfactorily.Definition is very good and the old Kodachrome can't be faulted really.