Some background:
I'm a projectionist here at WPI, and at present, we have 3 DP70 heads. I'm currently trying to document the history of our machines, and have come across some discrepancies I'm hoping the wealth of knowledge here may have some insight into. The serial numbers we have, as I was told, and as in70mm.com records, are numbers 803, 806, and 873, however, I have started to come upon some information that raises questions as to the accuracy of that with regard to 803. Further, our internal records conflict with the history of 806 I've been able to find elsewhere.
The history of our machines as I understand it:
Head serial number 873 is in our booth, and assembled as our 1st projector. It is on a pedestal with serial number 59-103, which aligns what in70mm notes. This projector was donated by National Amusements in 1989. The head with a mystery serial number is presently installed on our 2nd machine. The history with it, as we understand, is that it was donated to us by National Amusements at the same time as 873, and when our 2nd projector suffered a sheared driveshaft in 2014. At this point, head 806 was sourced from the James Bond theater in Chicago for spares. We have internal documentation claiming that a head swap of our 2nd machine occurred in 2014 (though at this point, unless the serial plates were swapped without damaging the rivets, that seems highly unlikely). The head presently on the 2nd machine has rivets for a serial plate, but no serial plate. This machine, I had been told, has head 803 on it, though I cannot find any reference to 803 anywhere in our documentation, or on the head presently installed on the 2nd projector. Further, in70mm records that a DP70 with head serial number 803 is also present at Bahía Blanca in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The only other serial number I can find mention of in our documentation is 808. We have a manual with "EL4000 Serial 808" penciled very lightly onto the cover. Obviously this manual could have come from anywhere, however, it begs the question: is our mystery head actually 808 and not 803, and that number was misread off of the manual? The database on in70mm.com does not list an 808 anywhere, and I fully believe it is more likely that we made a clerical error at some point than it is that this is the only 0800-series DP70 serial number duplication on record.
Mark Guldbrandsen gave the following history of head 806 to in70mm.com in 2016: "Actually 806 has a way more colored history than just being bought by James Bond. It went from BL&S to Sam Chavez in CA., to Paul Mundt in El Cerrito CA (They shared the same shop there) to Myself in St. Charles, Illinois via Paul Mundt and then several years later to James Bond. 806 has a blue plexi door, only one I;ve seen like this and it was used at the Cinema Borealis Outdoor Screening in Grant Park Chicago to run Days Of Heaven and 2001 A Space Odyssey."
We have this light blue-windowed door in storage as well, and I'm assuming we got it when we got 806 in 2014. I'm inclined to believe this history, however it raises further questions about what head is presently on our 2nd machine, and whether or not the head was actually swapped in 2014 (I at this point don't believe that it was given the serial plate situation).
The Questions Raised:
I'm interested to hear insight as to the 803, 808, or something else situation, as well as if anyone here knows more about the history of 806 so that we can piece together a better timeline of where it was between 1989 and 2014. Further, if anyone has more information about the DP70s operated at National Amusements in Worcester MA, that would be fantastic, as it would likely answer the question of what our mystery head is.
Some relevant photos:
Serial806.jpgSerial plate 806, in storage, mostly dismantled
Serial873.jpg
Serial plate 873, installed on our 1st projector in the booth (note "Holland" which, of our three heads is only present on this one)
in70mm-Borealis-Booth.jpg
in70mm-Borealis.jpg
If 806 was in fact used for the Borealis outdoor screening, here it is running that. (James Bond via in70mm.com)
Edit: Fixing some formatting errors, editor did some wacky hyperlink stuff + embedded images
I'm a projectionist here at WPI, and at present, we have 3 DP70 heads. I'm currently trying to document the history of our machines, and have come across some discrepancies I'm hoping the wealth of knowledge here may have some insight into. The serial numbers we have, as I was told, and as in70mm.com records, are numbers 803, 806, and 873, however, I have started to come upon some information that raises questions as to the accuracy of that with regard to 803. Further, our internal records conflict with the history of 806 I've been able to find elsewhere.
The history of our machines as I understand it:
Head serial number 873 is in our booth, and assembled as our 1st projector. It is on a pedestal with serial number 59-103, which aligns what in70mm notes. This projector was donated by National Amusements in 1989. The head with a mystery serial number is presently installed on our 2nd machine. The history with it, as we understand, is that it was donated to us by National Amusements at the same time as 873, and when our 2nd projector suffered a sheared driveshaft in 2014. At this point, head 806 was sourced from the James Bond theater in Chicago for spares. We have internal documentation claiming that a head swap of our 2nd machine occurred in 2014 (though at this point, unless the serial plates were swapped without damaging the rivets, that seems highly unlikely). The head presently on the 2nd machine has rivets for a serial plate, but no serial plate. This machine, I had been told, has head 803 on it, though I cannot find any reference to 803 anywhere in our documentation, or on the head presently installed on the 2nd projector. Further, in70mm records that a DP70 with head serial number 803 is also present at Bahía Blanca in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The only other serial number I can find mention of in our documentation is 808. We have a manual with "EL4000 Serial 808" penciled very lightly onto the cover. Obviously this manual could have come from anywhere, however, it begs the question: is our mystery head actually 808 and not 803, and that number was misread off of the manual? The database on in70mm.com does not list an 808 anywhere, and I fully believe it is more likely that we made a clerical error at some point than it is that this is the only 0800-series DP70 serial number duplication on record.
Mark Guldbrandsen gave the following history of head 806 to in70mm.com in 2016: "Actually 806 has a way more colored history than just being bought by James Bond. It went from BL&S to Sam Chavez in CA., to Paul Mundt in El Cerrito CA (They shared the same shop there) to Myself in St. Charles, Illinois via Paul Mundt and then several years later to James Bond. 806 has a blue plexi door, only one I;ve seen like this and it was used at the Cinema Borealis Outdoor Screening in Grant Park Chicago to run Days Of Heaven and 2001 A Space Odyssey."
We have this light blue-windowed door in storage as well, and I'm assuming we got it when we got 806 in 2014. I'm inclined to believe this history, however it raises further questions about what head is presently on our 2nd machine, and whether or not the head was actually swapped in 2014 (I at this point don't believe that it was given the serial plate situation).
The Questions Raised:
I'm interested to hear insight as to the 803, 808, or something else situation, as well as if anyone here knows more about the history of 806 so that we can piece together a better timeline of where it was between 1989 and 2014. Further, if anyone has more information about the DP70s operated at National Amusements in Worcester MA, that would be fantastic, as it would likely answer the question of what our mystery head is.
Some relevant photos:
Serial806.jpgSerial plate 806, in storage, mostly dismantled
Serial873.jpg
Serial plate 873, installed on our 1st projector in the booth (note "Holland" which, of our three heads is only present on this one)
in70mm-Borealis-Booth.jpg
in70mm-Borealis.jpg
If 806 was in fact used for the Borealis outdoor screening, here it is running that. (James Bond via in70mm.com)
Edit: Fixing some formatting errors, editor did some wacky hyperlink stuff + embedded images
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