In my experience, Elmo machines are susceptible to WOW. It seems to be associated with the small diameter of the brass sound capstan and variations in the wind-up tension on the rear spool. Both my GS 1200'S will exhibit wow on certain sections of certain films, other films being seemingly wow free. This is one reason I like Eumigs. I have never heard wow on any Eumig projector, be it series 800 or series 900. If you look at the Eumigs, the sound capstan diameter is much bigger than the Elmo's and the rubber roller is much larger and is really sprung down hard, very effectively clamping the film and preventing slippage. I think the Elmo's are really susceptible to variations in the coefficient of friction of the film, which of course is really influenced by film lubrication products.
But IMO the equally important root cause of WOW on the Elmo is tugging or tension variation by the take up spool. If you are running film on the Elmo and you hear wow, just put your hand on the take up reel and stop it for a few seconds and you will find that the wow is totally gone. Also look at the black spring loaded tensioning piece right below the sound capstan. If you see this moving up and down then you have wow, it should be rock steady or at least moving up and down very slowly. Yesterday I was running a film on my version 1 GS1200 and the wow was very bad, with the black tensioner moving up and down like crazy. So I removed the take up motor and cleaned and lubricated all the little gears and also a drop of oil into the shaft of the ratchet. I also cleaned and lubricated all the pulleys and the cogged belt in the take up arm. Result - no wow and the tensioner is now rock steady.
If you have a bad motor, or one with heavily worn brushes, this can of course induce significant torque variations into the take up reel. The solution is then to either replace the motor, or take it apart and clean it and maybe install new brushes. This is a tricky operation though, as the brushes are easily broken, as I found out a couple of weeks ago when I was doing this.
One other thing that helps reduce wow is to use the large 1200ft Elmo reel. The higher rotary inertia of this metal reel smooth's out tension variation (acting like a flywheel), so it is good practice to use this as your take up reel all the time, even when projecting short 200 ft films.
But IMO the equally important root cause of WOW on the Elmo is tugging or tension variation by the take up spool. If you are running film on the Elmo and you hear wow, just put your hand on the take up reel and stop it for a few seconds and you will find that the wow is totally gone. Also look at the black spring loaded tensioning piece right below the sound capstan. If you see this moving up and down then you have wow, it should be rock steady or at least moving up and down very slowly. Yesterday I was running a film on my version 1 GS1200 and the wow was very bad, with the black tensioner moving up and down like crazy. So I removed the take up motor and cleaned and lubricated all the little gears and also a drop of oil into the shaft of the ratchet. I also cleaned and lubricated all the pulleys and the cogged belt in the take up arm. Result - no wow and the tensioner is now rock steady.
If you have a bad motor, or one with heavily worn brushes, this can of course induce significant torque variations into the take up reel. The solution is then to either replace the motor, or take it apart and clean it and maybe install new brushes. This is a tricky operation though, as the brushes are easily broken, as I found out a couple of weeks ago when I was doing this.
One other thing that helps reduce wow is to use the large 1200ft Elmo reel. The higher rotary inertia of this metal reel smooth's out tension variation (acting like a flywheel), so it is good practice to use this as your take up reel all the time, even when projecting short 200 ft films.
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