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alexandre favre

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Everything posted by alexandre favre

  1. I have an Arri 435ES 4perf movement, I could sell it to you for 3500 euros + technician fees to remove it from the current housing. You can send me a private message if you're interested.
  2. "This lens is an excellent companion to the Canon 8-64mm T2.4. It covers an excellent range, and it’s still very compact and lightweight, perfect for documentary shooting. It’s sharp across its entire range and has medium contrast. It maintains a fast T stop of T2.5 over the entire zoom range with no ramping. Condition: The lens has a small fungus mark on the side of one of its elements. Although there is a small mark on the coating, it does not appear in the captured images. There are also small cleaning marks and dust on the front and rear elements. The lens was serviced last month. Price: 3900 euros Pickup is possible in Switzerland.
  3. According to Yves Bornand, a Bolex technician, the rear ring of the lens can be resized using a lathe. This procedure, illustrated with the POE zoom, is applicable to the Vario Switar 86 as well.
  4. Claudius Kelterborn has Arri 2c 3 perf, 3C 2 perf https://www.filmkamera.ch/ with PL mount. I also have one with PL mount, but it is currently being serviced by a technician in Zurich.
  5. I met Dennis while working on a documentary film about Bolex. His cameras are all kept in very good condition.
  6. I have an eyepiece available for purchase in Switzerland. Feel free to send me a private message if you're interested.
  7. Germany: https://www.gecko-cam.com/ https://www.pure4c.de/ https://www.pstechnik.de/ Sweden: https://rodensjo.se/
  8. From Serial Number 233 801. "Material and surface treatment of the gate have been modified in order to reduce sliding friction and the risk of oxydation and emulsion deposits. Stainless steel has been replaced by aluminium, and the thickness of the picture gate has been diminished in order to avoid reflexes. Introduction of a Nylon insert opposite the reverse motion claw. Both Nylon inserts are driven and cemented." Your REX3 camera is from 1963 -1964 (202501-210600). A qualified technician replaced the film gate during a CLA.
  9. It is a Chronocinegines Longines with a Paillard Bolex camera modified to run at 100FPS. It was used to capture a series of images for the photo-finish. See pictures below. I was trying to find the name of the cameramen without success.
  10. Someone from Sweden is selling one on this facebook group (24 January) https://www.facebook.com/groups/2248960670
  11. I was trying the super 16 Zeiss super speed MKII (12-16-25-50) with the red epic helium 8K and It looked good in 4K. The 9.5mm did not work with the mount I had unfortunately. The canon 8-64 is also nice but vignette in 4K. You could change the red colorspace to Arri Alexa https://truecolor.us/downloads/red-to-alexa-lut-package/ After that, you could color space transform to cineon and use the print film emulation in Davinci or the one from lightillusion. If you add blur to the footage under the layer of grain, it helps. You could add halation as well. Or use existing plugins: https://videovillage.co/filmbox/ https://www.dehancer.com/store/davinci_resolve
  12. If you don't find a Jem Ball, you could use a Chimera lantern with a Chimera triolet Flood Light. https://chimeralighting.com/shop/?item=29231
  13. If you dont' have time to do a test, you can try to check exposure with a digital camera and overexpose one stop. I did this with a 5D some years ago and it was successful.
  14. Simon Wyss made up another story, we wil never see pictures from him, he is too busy spreading his hate on german forum. https://www.filmvorfuehrer.de/topic/31157-wechsel-bei-bolex-international/?tab=comments#comment-326552 https://www.filmvorfuehrer.de/topic/31971-bolex-international-geht-es-schlecht/?tab=comments#comment-335648
  15. At least you are reading the good documentation. Could you please answer my question and not elucubrate on other topics? We both know that Bolex International has nothing to do with Paillard. Can you show the pictures of the "Wreckage". Photograms of the "ghost images", etc. Otherwise I will conclude you made up another story.
  16. I was answering Simon Wyss, my apologies if I wasn't clear. Hopefully we all agree that the Bolex lamp shades should be forbidden by the internet police.
  17. Simon, it is admirable that you are trying to repair cameras and keeping this medium alive. On the contrary, spreading misinformation to promote your activity is dishonest. To clarify what you wrote previously, can you upload pictures of to the badly converted super 16 camera with the contact of the person who bought it? Or was the conversion also made by an individual in Austria? "Yes, I will. First of all the turret plate is the original, so lenses are still centered on the film middle line, not onto the new wider frame. Grebenstein in Germany used to shift the central turret post in order to take the lens mount threads 1,1 mm to the left," It has to be shifted 1.2mm for the SBM. If you want to teach people, be precise. Just for your information, It is done for every single conversion at Bolex International. "Next, the aperture, machined out obviously, was left blank metal. They wouldn’t even grab a sharpie and blacken the inner rim. Ghost frames were the result, that’s the designation in my language by meaning, the client showed me some footage on his laptop computer he brought with him, scanned on an Arrilaser." Can you please show us a photogram from the Arrilaser? From my experience "ghost frames" come from the bad synchronisation of the shutter and claw mechanism. I have filmed kilometers of film with super 16 Bolex the last 10 years and never noticied a single reflection coming from the inner rim. "Thirdly the sprocket drums seemed to have the teeth shortened but I didn’t measure that out since the client took the camera with him swiftly after I had disclosed to him what loss he was facing. When I tried the camera last week I did what I always do, then under the eyes of the owner, I used it like anybody uses such a camera. Wound the spring, closed the loop formers (where I encountered the old only half-solved problem of an almost hold sometimes), cut the film diagonally in the built-in knife (to feel whether that’s still sharp), and let the film thread mechanism lace up. In the lower loop the film derailed, I had to let the release go. Without a doubt the film guides were not aligned." Are you trying to say they do not test the camera with film? "Fourth, the very outermost maybe ten percent of the image width showed vignetting, depending on the focal length of the lenses used, to be seen clearly with the footage. When I peered onto the aperture from the front I realised that the reflex prism block cut into the Super-16 image. To remedy this the glass would have needed to be unglued from the bracket, shifted by only half to one millimeter, and cemented back in. One can work on the holder as well but from my experiences with the unit it’s better to leave its bores intact." I strongly doubt such camera would go out of the workshop in Yverdon. Please show picture. "I’m not totally clueless with film movie cameras. In H cameras I have found spring washers with burrs put into the mechanism the wrong way round originally, by Paillard in the sixties. A trained mechanic knows that spring washers mustn’t have the slightest burr. Also the orientation makes a difference between the spring barrel revolving smoothly or uneasily. That is the reason why I disassemble every H completely, if an overhaul has been agreed. It can help to swap the spool spindles, too, because their fit is narrow. And so on on so forth." I have met nearly fifty employees of the Paillard Bolex company. With all the quality control they had, what you say is near impossible. The camera was probably disassembled by an amateur later. It is easy to confirm by the look of the screws.
  18. Simon, criticizing your only provider of spare parts on a public forum is questionable. Maybe you will have more luck with Chambless, he is selling spare parts. If your clients cannot reach Bolex International, I would suggest them to contact a Bolexpert, Jean-Louis Seguin, Cinethinker, Duall, Lee Boscher, etc
  19. I would suggest Omnimago in Ingelheim. They have a scanity for 35mm, 16mm, 8mm and the prices are reasonable. https://www.omnimago.tv/startseite.html
  20. I sold a Bolex (rex5) super 16 to this French cinematographer in Spain. I don't remember if he was in Barcelona or Madrid. If you don't find one to buy, maybe he will let you rent his camera. https://www.instagram.com/lagoonoperators/
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