Originally posted by Jerry G. Axelsson
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Projectable? Where do you draw the line?
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Originally posted by Jerry G. Axelsson View PostKinoton FP-30E/D can handle shrunk film up to 0,8%. Then it taps out. (The film starts climbing over the feeding sprockets, usually the lower one so you lose the intermittent loop gradually). We usually do tests from 0,6% to see how how the print goes through the machine. I have not done the same test on older FP-20:s in recent times. Perhaps they have a slight advantage. DP70 can run prints up to 1,0% shrinkage.
In my experience my AA's do not have an advantage. For really shrunken film our Bauer U2s offered special sprockets, intended for shrunken nitrate prints.
In general, the acceptance of borderline useable prints has lowered, as most patrons are used to pristine, restored digital version, and do have a lower tolerance on worn and especially faded color print.
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Originally posted by Stefan Scholz View Post
Rubber band on the holdback shoe often helped with those prints on the border for FP 30 etc machines.
In my experience my AA's do not have an advantage. For really shrunken film our Bauer U2s offered special sprockets, intended for shrunken nitrate prints.
In general, the acceptance of borderline useable prints has lowered, as most patrons are used to pristine, restored digital version, and do have a lower tolerance on worn and especially faded color print.
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Originally posted by Benjamin Ruder View Post
Hi Jerry, I have done a little bit of that testing myself. Have you also done this for 16mm on FP38E?
Benjamin,
I have done testing on a Kinoton FP-38E and it does not handle 16mm shrinkage as well as for 35mm. The 16mm testfilm we can did not go well at 0,6%. We have not done any testing beyond that yet.
A note when comparing Kinoton FP-30D and FP-30/38E projectors. The E-machine has a larger intermittent sprocket, which might give you issues with shrikage at an earlier stage than the FP-30D machine. From what we have seen on both D and E-machines, the bottom feeding sprocket is the narrow sector.
Regarding kindness to film and ability to run shrunken film between the Kinoton FP-75E and the DP70. The FP-75E was fine but not as kind as our DP70:s with a new servomotor. Our upgraded DP70:s runs very smooth and has an easy start-up/ramp-up speed.
A note regarding the FP-75E. The filmpath around the soundhead (Kinoton rev. scan) is a fixed path between to feeding sprockets. You should always load the machine with a bit of slack around the soundhead to prevent film damage with shrunken film.
Let say for example that you have a shrunken reel with a new countdown leader. Making the loop just right (tight) on the leader might give you sprocket damage when the shrunken film is passing through the machine. I have seen it first hand.Last edited by Jerry G. Axelsson; 07-23-2025, 01:05 AM.
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The Kinoton RSSD is a "loose loop" system. There should ALWAYS be a pucker as the film heads into the pinch roller. This allows isolation between any eccentricities of the sprockets themselves. In the "Studio" grade projectors, there will also be a damper in the film path (immediately past the drum in the upper-left portion of the soundhead to further stabilize the film through there (it also will eliminate any chance of film damage). Kinoton did sell a retrofit kit for standard RSSDs to get the damper roller.
As for shrunken 16mm film on an FP38E, the larger sprockets (feed, holdback and intermittent) will work against it. While the larger sprockets are an advantage to normal sized film by distributing the load to wear each sprocket less, getting 3-5 perforations to all line up when there is so little tolerance in pitch is near impossible. Your best bet for such film is a 2-perf claw type projector. Even 3-perf claws are going to be dodgy, if not worse.
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Originally posted by Alex Mir View PostHi guys, I´m having issues with a Kinoton FP38 EC, the main CPU is crashing almost once a day... anyone knows somebody that may have one board for sale? PEC80-01+02 cheers!
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