Then there is the "lenticular" silver screen that was part of Fox's CInemaScope package. I remember seeing old Box Office issues in a booth I work in; it had the issues around 1951 and 2 that had Fox ads when it was pushing CInemaScope. I was intrigued that the description of the screen which Fox called their "Silver Mirror" or "Miracle Mirror" curved screen (or something close to that is what I remember). The thing is, it WAS a silver screen that they needed to maintain brightness given that they were spreading light over twice the area. The screen also had a mild curve as part of the spec, which I assume helped. The ads claimed you HAD to purchase the whole package, the lens, the screen, the penthouse. And it did use the word "lenticular" referring to the screen but did not explaining that any further. But evidently however that lenticular surface was constructed, it was a way to reduce hotspoting.
I asked a tech at MDI years ago before they were Strong about this lenticular thing; he knew about it but said today it would be much too expensive to manufacture and it hasn't be made by anyone for years. (I can't imaging Stewart not making a product because it cost too much.) But then the question also is, while that surface design might have given scope the needed gain while also reducing the hotspot, it might not have worked to hold polarization either -- in other words, not usable for polarized 3D.
BTW, there is no question what the hotspot moves with the patron. I walked into the back of a theatre that was using a silver screen so he could use a 1600w bulb rather than the higher wattage that should have been used. I walked across the rear of the house and watched this vicious hotspot follow me from one side of the screen to the other, so i doubt manipulating the hole size or neutral gradation filters will do anything but correct for one position in the theatre; everyone else will still see weird uneven lighting.
I asked a tech at MDI years ago before they were Strong about this lenticular thing; he knew about it but said today it would be much too expensive to manufacture and it hasn't be made by anyone for years. (I can't imaging Stewart not making a product because it cost too much.) But then the question also is, while that surface design might have given scope the needed gain while also reducing the hotspot, it might not have worked to hold polarization either -- in other words, not usable for polarized 3D.
BTW, there is no question what the hotspot moves with the patron. I walked into the back of a theatre that was using a silver screen so he could use a 1600w bulb rather than the higher wattage that should have been used. I walked across the rear of the house and watched this vicious hotspot follow me from one side of the screen to the other, so i doubt manipulating the hole size or neutral gradation filters will do anything but correct for one position in the theatre; everyone else will still see weird uneven lighting.
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