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This topic comprises 2 pages: 1 2
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Topic: Kelmar cue detector with ball bearing ground rollers.
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Tim Reed
Better Projection Pays
Posts: 5246
From: Northampton, PA
Registered: Sep 1999
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posted 06-17-2004 01:10 AM
That's right, the big rollers at the left/rear of the picture are the cross-cue. Place a foil straight across the film (on whichever side of the film contacts it - I think the base side). It does run past very fast, and Kelmar had pulse-stretchers in their Deluxe Automations for the cross-cue. The larger roller diameter also helped lengthen the time the foil was in contact with it.
Unless I am mistaken, the inboard cross cue bearing is the isolated one, and grounds against its outboard mate. Consequently, if you make inboard cues longer than 4-6 frames, it will also trip the cross cue by grounding it to the front ground roller.
Of course, the big problem with this pickoff is that you can't get the proper bearings for them anymore. When it was designed, the bearings from Kelmar were conductive, and (I was told) specially-made for the application. Off the shelf replacements, however, lose conductivity after just a few weeks and you end up missing cues.
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Tim Reed
Better Projection Pays
Posts: 5246
From: Northampton, PA
Registered: Sep 1999
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posted 06-17-2004 10:41 PM
No, they were okay when they worked - but just okay, nothing spectacular. But since you can't get reliable cues out of them anymore, they're really not much use, other than as a holder for a failsafe microswitch. Kelmar made a two-cue pickoff that had larger bearings and it was a lot more-reliable, even though it had the conductive bearing problem in later years, too. quote: Philip Wittlief Is it possible that the original bearings are no longer conductive.
I doubt they've survived this long. Normally, they'd wear out in a year or so anyway, and with off-the-shelf replacements now... you're lucky to get a few weeks out of them. And believe me, we tried everything... soaking bearings in solvent, lubricant, going wet/dry, you name it. Nothing worked for long.
You might get them to work if you had pulse stretchers on all the cues, but by the time you go through that trouble, you could just as well put prox's on them.
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