Hoping this is an easy adjustment/fix. Would appreciate anyone with experience installing/adjusting this assembly confirm my logic:
Over time I have become aware that our No. 1 Century has a tendency to impart some optical sound drum/flywheel rotation even when no film is threaded. It's drive side is the most difficult to access and service being pressed against our Christie Digital system. But I was in there yesterday for grease/inspection/dampening fluid, and I was able to spot the culprit.
Our main drive belt just barely edge contacts the rear thrust collar (CL-0082) enough to rotate it and cause a fine dusting of rubber around that collar. To avoid the contact the collar would have to move towards the bearing (and there is room there to move it on the flat ground in the shaft for the set screw).
Since moving collar inward would clear the contact, I also tried pushing on the flywheel itself, and sure enough, there is movement in the whole assembly when doing so. It seems to settle back to a seemingly correct drum position as soon as you let go, perhaps the result of the loading spring?
Here is a not so illustrative video of that end play when pressing on the flywheel assembly from the drive side, can't see my hands, just watch for the drum to jump in and out. I didn't think to take a photo of the belt contact issue when the covers were off unfortunately. I'll try to snag a photo of the thrust collar/belt/bearing current situation today.
So my logic is I can just loosen the rear thrust collar set screw and move it towards the bearing until that end play is gone (while also moving it out of the path of the drive belt)? I don't know how the drum position is set relative to the film path, my hope would be there is no adjustment necessary to that aspect?
My worry would be the loading spring actually has a bunch of force behind it, and i'll need extra hands or tools to compress it more than it currently is?
I would just use the other projector with zero end play to confirm the correct drum position, but our two Centuries are such unique snowflakes (different brand optical readers for example), that I don't trust the comparison.
Sound Impedance Drum Flywheel Assembly_Parts.png
Sound Impedance Drum Flywheel Assembly.png
Over time I have become aware that our No. 1 Century has a tendency to impart some optical sound drum/flywheel rotation even when no film is threaded. It's drive side is the most difficult to access and service being pressed against our Christie Digital system. But I was in there yesterday for grease/inspection/dampening fluid, and I was able to spot the culprit.
Our main drive belt just barely edge contacts the rear thrust collar (CL-0082) enough to rotate it and cause a fine dusting of rubber around that collar. To avoid the contact the collar would have to move towards the bearing (and there is room there to move it on the flat ground in the shaft for the set screw).
Since moving collar inward would clear the contact, I also tried pushing on the flywheel itself, and sure enough, there is movement in the whole assembly when doing so. It seems to settle back to a seemingly correct drum position as soon as you let go, perhaps the result of the loading spring?
Here is a not so illustrative video of that end play when pressing on the flywheel assembly from the drive side, can't see my hands, just watch for the drum to jump in and out. I didn't think to take a photo of the belt contact issue when the covers were off unfortunately. I'll try to snag a photo of the thrust collar/belt/bearing current situation today.
So my logic is I can just loosen the rear thrust collar set screw and move it towards the bearing until that end play is gone (while also moving it out of the path of the drive belt)? I don't know how the drum position is set relative to the film path, my hope would be there is no adjustment necessary to that aspect?
My worry would be the loading spring actually has a bunch of force behind it, and i'll need extra hands or tools to compress it more than it currently is?
I would just use the other projector with zero end play to confirm the correct drum position, but our two Centuries are such unique snowflakes (different brand optical readers for example), that I don't trust the comparison.
Sound Impedance Drum Flywheel Assembly_Parts.png
Sound Impedance Drum Flywheel Assembly.png
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