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Author
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Topic: Broken Reels Right outta the Cans!
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Monte L Fullmer
Film God
Posts: 8367
From: Nampa, Idaho, USA
Registered: Nov 2004
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posted 07-05-2007 04:45 AM
In the days of the metal reels, sometimes, we would have to bend out the flanges to be straght again before we would mount the print on our house reels on the film bench since we had to inspect every print that came in our theatre. Why also we had to make the flanges straight again is that the shipping reels became our takeup reels for shipout in our changeover machines. We always send prints out tails out-which was the requirements of the depots in those days since they received the print tails out, then inspected it by winding from tails to heads on the inspection table before that print left for another theatre.
Last year, I just about fainted when this one print came in to our theatre: We had a Kid Show ("Chipmunk Adventure".. 4 reels) that came in in mint condition. Acetate base and mounted on 4 new metal Goldberg reels with the heavy paper REEL ID wrap around each reel.
...also, with plastic reels, they do help lightens up the cans a bit. When plastic reels became into being in the mid 70's (and still solid hub), it was apparent that this was the way to go in reducing shipping weight, but the split reels didn't show up until the last 8yrs or so.
Just be thankful that you didn't have to go through the very crappy black plastic, 1st gen reels that came out of TECH about 8 yrs ago, (and those HORRIBLE 6k plastic shipping reels that WB and NL decided to use there for a short time..) esp when those things had broken hub locks and couldn't be locked together at all. I would take some spray vandalism remover,(which contained toulene) and glue those reels back together with this spray. I knew that TECH would have a biddie fit finding their reels glued together, but it was the only way to mount the film back on the reel when using a Christie MUT.
Yet, what is kinda fun, esp with TECH sending out those cans with that "spacer reel", and sometimes, they shove in some very old metal reel as that "spacer reel". One print that came in our theatre from TECH, had a very glossy bronze painted Goldberg reel with the stamping of the film studio (MGM) and the month and year (9-38) on the outboard of the flange. (Back in them days, studios did their own releasing and they owned their own shipping equipment-why you see on grey can shipments, the film studios, and if you get lucky, the date stamp on the cans themselves..).
The plastic reels we now have are really nothing: if they come unlocked in the cans, or that "foxbox", just clip them back together and learn to deal with the new technology we now have.
If the flange is actually cracked and broken, take some good ol' masking tape and tape them back together and let the depots handle these problems.
-Monte
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