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Author
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Topic: Ballantyne Pro 35 VIP Base Take Up Slipping
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Graham Way
Film Handler
Posts: 4
From: Coorparoo, QLD, Australia
Registered: Jan 2008
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posted 01-06-2008 05:36 AM
Hi, I'm new to the forum and not in the industry, however, I do love my movies and some months ago got a Ballantyne Pro 35 with a VIP base and Strong Lume-x lamphouse. The projector has come from a theatrette run by Qantas Airlines, and generally seems to be in good condition.
With the help of a friend who uses 35mm portables for outdoor screenings, we re-assembled the pieces and wiring and got it up and running in my home theatre/screening room and it has been working well for several months.
Just recently I have encountered a problem where, when I start the motor the takeup reel now does not spin quickly enough during the first 1 - 2 minutes to take up the film. Also, towards the end of a feature the problem occurs again when there is a lot of weight on the reel. I am using the 30" reels that came with the projector and these can be seen in the manual http://www.film-tech.com/warehouse/manuals/BALVIP.pdf
The manual refers to the belt tension and this seems fine. Also if you look at Fig. 5 on page 5 of the manual, it gives the tension for a 2000' reel, but not for a 12000'/30" reel. Can anyone help me out with the correct tension? Also, how often should the pads between part 27 and 2796 be changed.(2796 is the part with the 'A' on it and the belt from the motor drives this, and 27 is the part immediately behind it, which drives the takeup reel).
I have searched through the forums here and I have seen some older posts on this issue but they seem to relate to issues where smaller reels are be used.
Cheers and thanks in advance if anyone is able to help. Graham
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Dave Macaulay
Film God
Posts: 2321
From: Toronto, Canada
Registered: Apr 2001
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posted 01-07-2008 09:34 AM
I don't understand the pin. Normally the only pin is in the spring spacer; it engages the slot in the shaft and keeps the spring from turning on the shaft, tightening or loosening the tension adjustment nut. From the back side you should have 1 or 2 nuts, the spring, the spacer, then the 2796 pulley and bearing. Then the 2785 friction disk with the felt pads, attached to the shaft with setscrews. If this is pinned on, no big deal as it really doesn't need to come off. The usual problem is that aluminum is worn off the 2796 inside face and the felt pads get full of aluminum dust, making the surface very hard. The 2796 can get a groove ring worn down where the pads hit it too. I've never seen replacement felt pads. You should be able to clean them off, but extreme solvents may attack the epoxy that holds the pads on. Brake cleaner, kerosene, or varsol paint thinner should be OK. Lacquer thinner or acetone would be pretty risky. Once clean and dry soak the pads with silicon or synthetic oil. If the 2796 has a groove it can be refaced at a machine shop, you should have a smooth surface when done so the pads don't just get ground off. This tension assembly should have a 3V/3L V-belt drive, roundthane only if you can't get a proper belt. Both pulleys and the belt should be clean and oil-free. If the belt and tension are OK you can still have slack at the start if the reel hub is too small, I think the minimum is an 8" hub but you can check this easily. Lace up some film on the hub you have and hand advance the projector. If the hub is too small you will get slack, if it's large enough the film will pull tight. If it's too small you can just wrap junk film around it to make up a big enough "hub" to work, taping the end securely and threading onto it. This older style takeup has a high drive ratio and the shaft turns fairly slowly, the newer type (seen in the ballantyne reel arms PDF) turns much faster because of the small driven pulley and will work with standard house reels: I don't think the ones you have are fast enough for a 5" hub. Adjusting the takeup is usually described as "not too loose and not too tight". With 30" reels you should have an EZ-hub takeup reel - the pictures show one fitted although not super clear in the Film-Tech PDF. If you have a solid flange reel you may have trouble with slack on startup. If you can adjust the takeup tension just slightly tighter than where the film stays tight on startup with a solid flange reel this is the best you can do. This will likely be too tight and you will have the holdback sprocket singing for the first few minutes, but if the film goes slack you will get some damage (estar) or a film break (acetate) when it snaps tight as the reel catches up. An EZ-hub takeup is best.
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Graham Way
Film Handler
Posts: 4
From: Coorparoo, QLD, Australia
Registered: Jan 2008
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posted 01-09-2008 07:10 AM
Dave I agree that's how it should work. So after further examination, I found that the leading edge of the spacer was damaged and wedged into the thread, making it look threaded. After clearing this and some 'appropriate' coercion the spacer came free, and so did the pulley.
I cleaned the inside face of the 2796 pulley and there is no visible groove. The 2785 friction disk with the pads moved slightly back on the shaft to reveal what appears to be oil slots?? Is oil required here as part of the maintenance?
The pads are black and appear to be very well impregnated with oil, so based on your comments and Gordon's comment this seems to be correct.
I will be able to clean more fully on the weekend, when I have more time. Now that the spacer and spring are working as they should, I have reassembled for a quick test and, the lack of tension appears to be solved. Though, I need to experiment a little to find the "not too loose and not too tight" spot.
Thanks for your help and tips
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