As I mentioned in the Eumig Motor mount thread, I am awaiting my new motor mounts.
I do have a decision to make. I have an 810D that I got new in 1974, but now has a burnt out motor, worn rubber discs, and the stops for the speed switch broke long ago (so it is actually a true variable speed projector now). I bought a 712 that seems to be OK, but the motor mounts had literally disintegrated without a trace. I transplanted the 810D motor mounts into it, and it ran OK (but without film -- I hadn't cleaned it up enough nor lubed it yet), and the rubber drive wheels look barely used. Overall, though, the machine looks like it had been left out in the rain for a century or two, then stored in a cold wine cellar for another century. The 1.6 lens needed cleaning, which I did, but luckily I have a prisitine 1.3 lens (screw-in type) in one of my parts-bins. The spaceman lamp still works, and I have 2 spares in my stockpile for my Bolex 18-5. The volume control works, but makes static noise through the speaker when turning -- I assume I just need some contact cleaner. After a few minutes, the motor mounts from the 810 cracked and started to crumble.
Decisions -- pros and cons:
-------------------------------
Rebuilding the 810D pros:
1. I have kept it in good cosmetic condition.
2. I know the sound and speakers work without issues.
3. I have plenty of spare pressure pads and gates.
4. It was my first sound projector!
5. It is Dual-8 (though some might list this as a con, I don't have any Standard 8mm sound films, and I have many other Standard 8mm silent projectors.)
6. EFP lamp
Rebuilding the 810D cons:
1. All the issues listed in the first paragraph.
2. 1-pin claw.
3. Can the motor from the 710 work in this? I think so, since it is exactly the same size and appearance. I'm no electrical wiz, though. It will run at the correct speed, right -- meaning before it hits the rubber drives. Will the transformer supply the same voltage? (I am good with mechanical things, but regarding eletricity, I can connect wires, strip them if I have to, and know to match watts and volts. Not sure about other stuff, lol.)
4. Strictly auto-thread, can't remove film from path without unscrewing sound heads -- but been there, done that. Some nooks and crannies to clean in film path -- more chance of scratching film -- though I have never had an issue, unlike with my Elmo ST-1200HD.
Rebuilding the 712 pros:
1. The motor works.
2. 2-pin claw.
3. I have spare pressure plates that fit.
4. The rubber drives are in great condition.
5. Speed switch works properly, including the stops.
6. The motor alignment is spot-on (at least when the motor mounts were put into it.) The front control knob stops for the motor tilt have not been monkeyed with. The screws on the motor mount that affect the tilt alignment have not been monkeyed with either -- original factory paint intact.
7. Semi auto-thread -- practically manual. Can remove film from path easily. No nooks and crannies to clean in film path -- less chance of scratching films.
Rebuilding the 712 cons:
1. All the issues listed in the first paragraph -- including some rust and lots of blueish/white "stuff" inside -- oxidation?
2. Spaceman lamp -- although I could convert to halogen, albeit being stuck with 8 volts and 50 watts. The projected image was pretty bright though, even with the 1.6 lens (didn't try the 1.3 yet.) -- much like the Bolex 18-5 is.
3. Gate is fixed and not removeable without unscrewing.
I was thinking of doing this in incremental steps, and testing without film first, before deciding how to proceed.
Keep in mind that I only plan to use this for 24fps Super 8 sound films. Something like this:
1. Install motor mounts into 712.
2. Test without film. (sort of did 1 and 2 already with the old 810 motor mounts before they crumbled.)
3. Decision time: Do I painstakingly clean it, lube it, and proceed to test with film?
otherwise:
4. Transplant 712 motor with new mounts into 810.
5. Transplant 712 rubber drives into 810.
6. Test without film.
7. Test with film and try to get the speed right (There are no stops on the speed switch).
8. Decision time: if speed runs consistently for sound films, possibly do the following:
9. Transplant speed switch mechanism from 712 to 810 or
10. Just leave speed alone, and possibly temporarily remove or lock speed switch. (I might have to tweak the speed later on, though.)
Additional tweaks if I go the 810 route:
11. Transplant 2 pin shutter claw from 712 to 810 -- I know there will be some trial and error alignment, and of course timing, which I have done before with an Elmo ST-1200HD.
Additional tweaks if I go 712 route:
12. Convert to use halogen lamp.
I am leaning toward rebuilding the 810.
So steps 4 - 7, 8 (test thoroughly, maybe days or weeks), then 9-10. Step 11 if I feel the need, though frankly I never had much issue with one pin for Super 8 -- it never handled Standard 8mm well, though.
Any thoughts, ideas, or advice welcomed. This is really just a pet project due to the sentimental nature of the Eumig. I already have, for Super 8 sound, a perfectly working Elmo ST-1200HD, another one on the mend that I am close to reviving, and a Yashica (Yamawa-made) 820 that works beautifully. The latter might be my favorite Super 8 sound projctor that I picked up for a relatively "song-and-dance" price about a year ago that just needed belts. (Shipping cost more than the selling price of the projector.) With the EFP and 1.3 lens, it projects nearly as bright and sharp as the Elmo ST-1200HD, and handles films much better -- rock steady pic on any film I have tried. Only 600 feet capacity, but considering the relatively few films I have mounted on 800 foot and 1200 foot reels, it gets a lot of use.
Thanks
I do have a decision to make. I have an 810D that I got new in 1974, but now has a burnt out motor, worn rubber discs, and the stops for the speed switch broke long ago (so it is actually a true variable speed projector now). I bought a 712 that seems to be OK, but the motor mounts had literally disintegrated without a trace. I transplanted the 810D motor mounts into it, and it ran OK (but without film -- I hadn't cleaned it up enough nor lubed it yet), and the rubber drive wheels look barely used. Overall, though, the machine looks like it had been left out in the rain for a century or two, then stored in a cold wine cellar for another century. The 1.6 lens needed cleaning, which I did, but luckily I have a prisitine 1.3 lens (screw-in type) in one of my parts-bins. The spaceman lamp still works, and I have 2 spares in my stockpile for my Bolex 18-5. The volume control works, but makes static noise through the speaker when turning -- I assume I just need some contact cleaner. After a few minutes, the motor mounts from the 810 cracked and started to crumble.
Decisions -- pros and cons:
-------------------------------
Rebuilding the 810D pros:
1. I have kept it in good cosmetic condition.
2. I know the sound and speakers work without issues.
3. I have plenty of spare pressure pads and gates.
4. It was my first sound projector!
5. It is Dual-8 (though some might list this as a con, I don't have any Standard 8mm sound films, and I have many other Standard 8mm silent projectors.)
6. EFP lamp
Rebuilding the 810D cons:
1. All the issues listed in the first paragraph.
2. 1-pin claw.
3. Can the motor from the 710 work in this? I think so, since it is exactly the same size and appearance. I'm no electrical wiz, though. It will run at the correct speed, right -- meaning before it hits the rubber drives. Will the transformer supply the same voltage? (I am good with mechanical things, but regarding eletricity, I can connect wires, strip them if I have to, and know to match watts and volts. Not sure about other stuff, lol.)
4. Strictly auto-thread, can't remove film from path without unscrewing sound heads -- but been there, done that. Some nooks and crannies to clean in film path -- more chance of scratching film -- though I have never had an issue, unlike with my Elmo ST-1200HD.
Rebuilding the 712 pros:
1. The motor works.
2. 2-pin claw.
3. I have spare pressure plates that fit.
4. The rubber drives are in great condition.
5. Speed switch works properly, including the stops.
6. The motor alignment is spot-on (at least when the motor mounts were put into it.) The front control knob stops for the motor tilt have not been monkeyed with. The screws on the motor mount that affect the tilt alignment have not been monkeyed with either -- original factory paint intact.
7. Semi auto-thread -- practically manual. Can remove film from path easily. No nooks and crannies to clean in film path -- less chance of scratching films.
Rebuilding the 712 cons:
1. All the issues listed in the first paragraph -- including some rust and lots of blueish/white "stuff" inside -- oxidation?
2. Spaceman lamp -- although I could convert to halogen, albeit being stuck with 8 volts and 50 watts. The projected image was pretty bright though, even with the 1.6 lens (didn't try the 1.3 yet.) -- much like the Bolex 18-5 is.
3. Gate is fixed and not removeable without unscrewing.
I was thinking of doing this in incremental steps, and testing without film first, before deciding how to proceed.
Keep in mind that I only plan to use this for 24fps Super 8 sound films. Something like this:
1. Install motor mounts into 712.
2. Test without film. (sort of did 1 and 2 already with the old 810 motor mounts before they crumbled.)
3. Decision time: Do I painstakingly clean it, lube it, and proceed to test with film?
otherwise:
4. Transplant 712 motor with new mounts into 810.
5. Transplant 712 rubber drives into 810.
6. Test without film.
7. Test with film and try to get the speed right (There are no stops on the speed switch).
8. Decision time: if speed runs consistently for sound films, possibly do the following:
9. Transplant speed switch mechanism from 712 to 810 or
10. Just leave speed alone, and possibly temporarily remove or lock speed switch. (I might have to tweak the speed later on, though.)
Additional tweaks if I go the 810 route:
11. Transplant 2 pin shutter claw from 712 to 810 -- I know there will be some trial and error alignment, and of course timing, which I have done before with an Elmo ST-1200HD.
Additional tweaks if I go 712 route:
12. Convert to use halogen lamp.
I am leaning toward rebuilding the 810.
So steps 4 - 7, 8 (test thoroughly, maybe days or weeks), then 9-10. Step 11 if I feel the need, though frankly I never had much issue with one pin for Super 8 -- it never handled Standard 8mm well, though.
Any thoughts, ideas, or advice welcomed. This is really just a pet project due to the sentimental nature of the Eumig. I already have, for Super 8 sound, a perfectly working Elmo ST-1200HD, another one on the mend that I am close to reviving, and a Yashica (Yamawa-made) 820 that works beautifully. The latter might be my favorite Super 8 sound projctor that I picked up for a relatively "song-and-dance" price about a year ago that just needed belts. (Shipping cost more than the selling price of the projector.) With the EFP and 1.3 lens, it projects nearly as bright and sharp as the Elmo ST-1200HD, and handles films much better -- rock steady pic on any film I have tried. Only 600 feet capacity, but considering the relatively few films I have mounted on 800 foot and 1200 foot reels, it gets a lot of use.
Thanks
Comment