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Author
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Topic: Aperture plates no longer work as before
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Randy Stankey
Film God
Posts: 6539
From: Erie, Pennsylvania
Registered: Jun 99
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posted 07-19-2011 08:22 PM
With the third option, there are a lot of people who will do stupid things and lie about it, afterward.
No, I'm not saying that you or your wife are lying or doing anything wrong. I'm just saying that you have to be on guard for things like that.
When I was a service tech for Cinemark, I had a theater that continually had problems with aperture plates getting filed out. I replaced the plates and filed them PERFECTLY. I'm not very good at filing plates. It's an art form and it takes a lot of practice to get them perfect but these plates were probably the best I ever did. They looked really good.
Two weeks later, I got called back to that same theater because the picture was "going off the screen" again. When I got there, I took one look at my handy work and it was clear that somebody had filed them. A monkey could have done a better job with a machete! I called the theater manager over and confronted him about it. He claimed that there was nobody at the theater would could have done it. "In fact," he said, "we don't even have an aperture file in this theater."
I walked over to the work bench, looked in the pencil cup and found an aperture file with little gold specs of dust all over it. I held it up to the manager and, without even saying a word, put that file in my tool case. I replaced the plate but it wasn't nearly as good as the one I did last time. I was too pissed off to do a really good job.
On the way out the door, I turned in my report and told the manager that I would put a baseball bat upside the head of the next son of a bitch that even LOOKED at an aperture plate funny!
Never had another problem with that theater again.
Again, I'm not saying you did it. I'm not saying she did it, nor do I know that anybody did anything wrong. I'm just saying that there are people who will mess around with things they shouldn't and lie to your face. You just need to look at problems like this more carefully when there is a chance that somebody has tinkered where they ought not to.
Other possibilities:
4) Trap/gate alignment to the intermittent sprocket.
5) Lens/turret alignment to the film plane.
If the projector was working perfectly in respect to the aperture and it has recently been worked on, the technician who make the repairs SHOULD HAVE done these alignments before he released the machine for service.
If this is the case, he should come back to repair the projector and you should not have to pay for the service call.
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