-NO, NOT the ones you put in your shoes! (-although, here and there that’s not a bad idea, either…)
What I’m talking about is the feet on your projectors. They’re down there for years doing their job while the belts and the bulbs and all the other bits and bobs get all the attention. Fact of the matter is we rarely look at the bottom of our machines (maybe it’s just not fashionable). I was picking up my Kodak Pageant a few days ago, right hand on the handle, left along a bottom edge,...something just felt…wrong!
-so I took a look:
l
Doesn’t look at all like a Kodak Pageant, does it? It could be a guitar amplifier or a big speaker or a case for a musical instrument. (-all perspective!)
-but look at these feet! The top one has the plastic foot just busted up: a nice, jagged burr, but the bottom is even worse! The “foot” in that case is now a Phillips head screw. It’s been at it so long that the plating is wearing off. I had to pick all sorts of debris out of the screw head before I could remove it: these are scrapings of whatever surfaces this has been sliding around on for a couple of years. (It certainly has left its mark on the world!)
This is a potential public-relations nightmare! I usually operate this thing on a projector stand: nice, thick cast aluminum tabletop: it’s basically an anvil when it comes to surface damage. -but, what happens that day your friends let you put this machine on their polished mahogany table top? Will they ever invite you again? (-and what happens if you are married to the owner of that polished mahogany table top?! Will you wind up showing your nasty films out in the garage?)
Fortunately, a trip to the hardware store, about 5 bucks and a few minutes with a screwdriver set everything right. One original foot survived intact: Good! it's nice to have an example when you replace a part.
I noticed too, that with the new feet, the machine has a lot more grip on the surface. Considering how close it is to the edge, this may keep it from sliding off there some day. It’s a win all around!
Now, In case you are wondering how this got to be a General Yak (It was only a Colonel Yak five days ago…). Well, this isn’t just a “16mm Problem”.
o
One again: Check your feet!
Coming soon: Check your teeth! (GEARS, that is!)
What I’m talking about is the feet on your projectors. They’re down there for years doing their job while the belts and the bulbs and all the other bits and bobs get all the attention. Fact of the matter is we rarely look at the bottom of our machines (maybe it’s just not fashionable). I was picking up my Kodak Pageant a few days ago, right hand on the handle, left along a bottom edge,...something just felt…wrong!
-so I took a look:
l
Doesn’t look at all like a Kodak Pageant, does it? It could be a guitar amplifier or a big speaker or a case for a musical instrument. (-all perspective!)
-but look at these feet! The top one has the plastic foot just busted up: a nice, jagged burr, but the bottom is even worse! The “foot” in that case is now a Phillips head screw. It’s been at it so long that the plating is wearing off. I had to pick all sorts of debris out of the screw head before I could remove it: these are scrapings of whatever surfaces this has been sliding around on for a couple of years. (It certainly has left its mark on the world!)
This is a potential public-relations nightmare! I usually operate this thing on a projector stand: nice, thick cast aluminum tabletop: it’s basically an anvil when it comes to surface damage. -but, what happens that day your friends let you put this machine on their polished mahogany table top? Will they ever invite you again? (-and what happens if you are married to the owner of that polished mahogany table top?! Will you wind up showing your nasty films out in the garage?)
Fortunately, a trip to the hardware store, about 5 bucks and a few minutes with a screwdriver set everything right. One original foot survived intact: Good! it's nice to have an example when you replace a part.
I noticed too, that with the new feet, the machine has a lot more grip on the surface. Considering how close it is to the edge, this may keep it from sliding off there some day. It’s a win all around!
Now, In case you are wondering how this got to be a General Yak (It was only a Colonel Yak five days ago…). Well, this isn’t just a “16mm Problem”.
o
-Behold the 800 Series Eumig!
One again: Check your feet!
Coming soon: Check your teeth! (GEARS, that is!)
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