Why not just put marks with a permanent felt tip pen on the face of each sprocket. Next thing Tony is gonna tell you that a still working Cray Model 2 computer is required to do the conversion math... Geez.... Make life easy, it'll still works for 8 perf too, because you know that Allen Barnes is gonna come across a used Iwerks 8 perf projector.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
70mm 8-Perf ?
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Mark Gulbrandsen View PostWhy not just put marks with a permanent felt tip pen on the face of each sprocket. Next thing Tony is gonna tell you that a still working Cray Model 2 computer is required to do the conversion math... Geez.... Make life easy, it'll still works for 8 perf too, because you know that Allen Barnes is gonna come across a used Iwerks 8 perf projector.
No need to be a butthead.
A marker will wear off very fast, that is why I'd do the notches.
Now go take a nap Gramps.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Randy Stankey View PostToo bad you couldn't put in a rotary encoder or even just an IR sensor to count clicks as the sprockets turn. Then you just make a divide-by-n counter and a digital display. Build in a control so that you can change "n" to the number of sprockets per frame. You'd be able to use it on any format of film that people can throw at you.
The electronic parts should be obtainable from the usual suspects. The only part I can't really figure out is how to put on the encoder/sensor. I'd have to see the device in order to figure it out but I'm sure that there are others who could do it just as well as I could...even better.
Or failing that, the fact it is a 2-gang, you could sacrifice it's usefulness for editing by putting all your encoder mods in place of one of the gangs, making it into a single-gang film counter, (which were a thing in this form factor too), I have a couple 16mm single gang style.
You'd have to zero the rotary "DRO" before use, but even with the existing notches for 8perf, that would be easy with the indent handle engaged and cranking it over to the zero frame line.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
With Cinemeccanica in theory still in production, I wonder if what remains of the industry as a whole would be better served by making a cost-effective diy 3d printable universal counter design... with perhaps only the film adjacent parts being traditional metal or plastic rollers/sprockets sourced from Cinemeccanica? One could make it a 2 gang with a 35mm sprocket and a 70mm sprocket. Silly, tiny market, but fun project.
Or better than two gang, make it a single but the sprocket and rollers swappable... so it can service 16mm too? Throw in a clever rewind bench mounting solution for film path alignment etc.
Comment
-
It doesn't matter what kind of ink is used. If it doesn't stay in the place where you put it, where does it go? It doesn't just evaporate. It's getting worn away. What is it getting worn away by? Film! If film rubs on the ink and wears it away, it only stands to reason that the ink is getting onto film.
It might not be a lot of ink, only a few dots. It probably doesn't happen all at once. It takes a certain amount of time. It gets worn away, little by little. Maybe even small flakes but, still, it is ink being transferred from one place to another. Even a small amount isn't something I'd want on my (somebody else's) film.
It's like those idiots who use white China marker to draw rings around the edges of the film on a platter, as they build, to mark the reel ends. Then people complain when the wax flakes off the film and gets all over the inside of the projector. Then that dust gets transferred back to the film and makes black specks all over the picture and people complain.
Maybe, back in the day, when people were running a proverbial grind house, those kinds of tricks might fly but, today, when film isn't being made the same way, you have to be a lot more careful.
In our case, with just a few dots of ink, maybe it doesn't matter so much but you still have to think about it and make an informed decision.
- Likes 2
Comment
-
Originally posted by Ryan Gallagher View PostIf one were to really go nuts with the universal encoder idea, it seems like there is enough shaft out where the knob is mounted to make room for an encoder disc and optical or magnetic incremental encoder wheel, even if you had to shorten the collar of the knob a bit.
Yes, it does look like there is enough room to squeeze in a reluctor wheel and a magnetic sensor. Now, you've got me thinking!
With a reluctor, versus a stepped encoder, you can detect speed of rotation and use that information to deduce film speed. If we use an Arduino or a Raspberry Pie or some other microprocessor, we can also detect changes in film speed over time. We could set a maximum film speed and set off an alarm if the speed goes too fast. There could be an alarm if the film starts or stops, unexpectedly. I wonder whether it would be possible to tell the difference between the film tailing out and a film break.
With all that, you might be able to set things up so that the device keeps track of reels for you. You could know their length. You could press a button to set a marker, of sorts, in the data so that you can record splices, defects or even catalogue scenes in the film, all down to the reel, foot and frame.
Who knows? We might even be able to detect the slight bump as a splice or defect passes through. Then the system could even find and count splices for you.
(Of course, this is all speculation. )
Comment
-
Originally posted by Randy Stankey View Post
Hmm... Do you mean like a reluctor wheel? (e.g. Like the way the anti-lock brakes on cars work.) There is a toothed wheel and a magnetic sensor that detects the passing of each tooth as the wheel rotates. In a car, that information is used to detect one or more wheels slipping on the road in order to activate the anti-lock brakes.
https://photo-solutions.com/the-diff...ry-disc-types/
https://www.usdigital.com/blog/encod...ncoders-intro/
Your mind was headed similar fun places as mine. I was imagining a film counter that could run while inspecting, with user buttons for "splice", "scratch", "repair" etc etc. It could generate an inspection file with exact distance from picture start or first frame etc, measure each reel, yada yada. You were going even further to imagine it alternatively attached to the projector and do more data logging there, and/or fire automations based on reel number and footage, breaks, etc.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Randy Stankey View Post
Hmm... Do you mean like a reluctor wheel? (e.g. Like the way the anti-lock brakes on cars work.) There is a toothed wheel and a magnetic sensor that detects the passing of each tooth as the wheel rotates. In a car, that information is used to detect one or more wheels slipping on the road in order to activate the anti-lock brakes.
Yes, it does look like there is enough room to squeeze in a reluctor wheel and a magnetic sensor. Now, you've got me thinking!
With a reluctor, versus a stepped encoder, you can detect speed of rotation and use that information to deduce film speed. If we use an Arduino or a Raspberry Pie or some other microprocessor, we can also detect changes in film speed over time. We could set a maximum film speed and set off an alarm if the speed goes too fast. There could be an alarm if the film starts or stops, unexpectedly. I wonder whether it would be possible to tell the difference between the film tailing out and a film break.
With all that, you might be able to set things up so that the device keeps track of reels for you. You could know their length. You could press a button to set a marker, of sorts, in the data so that you can record splices, defects or even catalogue scenes in the film, all down to the reel, foot and frame.
Who knows? We might even be able to detect the slight bump as a splice or defect passes through. Then the system could even find and count splices for you.
(Of course, this is all speculation. )
The arguably much cooler encoders Ryan shared a picture of are for absolute rotational reference, which we don't really need here, and tend to be bigger and more expensive.
I'm not quite sure what you mean when you say that a reluctor can detect speed of rotation and an encoder cannot. They both work on the same principle; there are x number of pulses per rotation, and depending on how many pulses you count per second, you can figure out how fast it's spinning.
I suspect any sort of splice detection would be difficult to make reliable, as tension will vary naturally across the length of a reel, changes in alignment of everything would probably mess with it, and all sorts of seemingly mundane things would make it hard. Storing footage counts would of course be trivial.
I do find all this discussion pretty funny as there were electronic film counters, but the only one I've ever used was utterly terrible! This one from Big Sky would stop counting if you went too fast, and you didn't need to go all that fast for that to happen...Last edited by Thomas Piccione; 12-29-2024, 06:28 PM.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by Thomas Piccione View Post
Randy if you're actually looking to try this, compact and integrated incremental encoders are something you can buy commercially. CUI (among other companies) makes various models, but I think the AM10 would be well suited to this task. I've attached the dimensions page from the datasheet, they're quite small. Only 9mm thick!
The arguably much cooler encoders Ryan shared a picture of are for absolute rotational reference, which we don't really need here, and tend to be bigger and more expensive.
I'm not quite sure what you mean when you say that a reluctor can detect speed of rotation and an encoder cannot. They both work on the same principle; there are x number of pulses per rotation, and depending on how many pulses you count per second, you can figure out how fast it's spinning.
I suspect any sort of splice detection would be difficult to make reliable, as tension will vary naturally across the length of a reel, changes in alignment of everything would probably mess with it, and all sorts of seemingly mundane things would make it hard. Storing footage counts would of course be trivial.
I do find all this discussion pretty funny as there were electronic film counters, but the only one I've ever used was utterly terrible! This one from Big Sky would stop counting if you went too fast, and you didn't need to go all that fast for that to happen...Last edited by Ryan Gallagher; 12-29-2024, 08:07 PM.
Comment
Comment