And gate tension is more of a live issue in arthouses than in first run theaters during the final decade of film as a mainstream release medium. In the latter, 99.9% of the stock that passed through the projector would have been Eastman 2383. I never noticed any difference in thickness between batches - at least, not enough to require gate tension adjustments in the projector.
In an arthouse/rep/cinematheque type place, however, you could be handling anything from tinted and toned 1920s nitrate at one end of the spectrum (so thick it's barely flexible, in extreme cases) to Eastman 2302 (so thin it's like handling non-adhesive Scotch tape) at the other. At the Egyptian I would check the gate tension after every changeover. Usually I barely had to touch it after the first reel of each feature print was running, but significant adjustments were needed occasionally.
In an arthouse/rep/cinematheque type place, however, you could be handling anything from tinted and toned 1920s nitrate at one end of the spectrum (so thick it's barely flexible, in extreme cases) to Eastman 2302 (so thin it's like handling non-adhesive Scotch tape) at the other. At the Egyptian I would check the gate tension after every changeover. Usually I barely had to touch it after the first reel of each feature print was running, but significant adjustments were needed occasionally.
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