Randy J Tomlinson Posted February 13, 2019 Share Posted February 13, 2019 What can i say, i love this B/W Film. Has some graining but for a Din21° Film it is beautiful. I wonder how it compares to Kodak Eastman Double-X? Filmed in december. Camera: My belove Arri SR3 Lense: Century Precision 6mm at F1.3 Super Wide Angle Lab is ANDEC in Berlin / Germany. Film purchased at Fotoimpex. https://youtu.be/NA97HtugQww Do you film in Black / White? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Michael Carter Posted February 13, 2019 Share Posted February 13, 2019 Yes. I limit filming to black and white. Developing at home is easy to do that way. Printing is also done and that gets complicated. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tim Smyth Posted February 21, 2019 Share Posted February 21, 2019 The 16mm Fomapan R100 film does not fit my 16mm Kodak Cine Special II camera. I would have liked to try it. Maybe I will try my Bolex. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mark Dunn Posted February 21, 2019 Share Posted February 21, 2019 (edited) The 16mm Fomapan R100 film does not fit my 16mm Kodak Cine Special II camera. I would have liked to try it. Maybe I will try my Bolex. Then you have single-perf stock and you ordered the wrong product. That camera has teeth on both sides of the sprocket, so it will only run double-perf film, which is available. https://www.macodirect.de/en/film/movie-films-super-8-to-35mm/1717/fomapan-r-100-16mm-x-30.5m-double-perforated Bolexes all take single perf. Edited February 21, 2019 by Mark Dunn Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Michael Carter Posted February 22, 2019 Share Posted February 22, 2019 The 16mm Fomapan R100 film does not fit my 16mm Kodak Cine Special II camera. I would have liked to try it. Maybe I will try my Bolex. some cine Kodak special mags ARE single perf, some are double perf Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tim Smyth Posted February 22, 2019 Share Posted February 22, 2019 Then you have single-perf stock and you ordered the wrong product. That camera has teeth on both sides of the sprocket, so it will only run double-perf film, which is available. https://www.macodirect.de/en/film/movie-films-super-8-to-35mm/1717/fomapan-r-100-16mm-x-30.5m-double-perforated Bolexes all take single perf. My camera is single perf. The Fomapan film is too wide to fit down the film track in the camera smoothly. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mark Dunn Posted February 22, 2019 Share Posted February 22, 2019 (edited) My camera is single perf. The Fomapan film is too wide to fit down the film track in the camera smoothly. In that case, have you run the camera before? It seems unlikely the stock would be out of spec. Does it run in the Bolex? If it does then it's the camera that's at fault. If not, very odd. The manufacturing tolerance for 16mm. in width is 0.025mm, thinner than a hair. It seems to me much more likely that the camera is out of adjustment. Edited February 22, 2019 by Mark Dunn 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tim Smyth Posted February 23, 2019 Share Posted February 23, 2019 (edited) In that case, have you run the camera before? It seems unlikely the stock would be out of spec. Does it run in the Bolex? If it does then it's the camera that's at fault. If not, very odd. The manufacturing tolerance for 16mm. in width is 0.025mm, thinner than a hair. It seems to me much more likely that the camera is out of adjustment. Hi Mark, Yes, I have run Kodak stock in it for years, in fact just a month or so before using Fomapan. The Cine Special II has a film track leading to, and from, the camera gate, and the Foma is ever so slightly wider than the Kodak stocks. After this happened I found other folks having this issue, but from years ago. I will try it in my Bolex, as I don't think it has an actual film track inside the camera, as I recall anyway. Edited February 23, 2019 by Tim Smyth Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ruotsalainen Werner Posted March 8, 2019 Share Posted March 8, 2019 (edited) Not really 16mm but both Std8 and DS8, also Fomapan 100; stock bought last April from Norway and shot last May here in Finland: DS8: (shot on three different Quartz DS8-3 cameras) Std8 (thanks to the lens of the two Leicina 8S cameras, much more contrasty footage): Almost all shots have been shot on a tripod. Scan: Wolverine, 15 Mbps hacked firmware, lowest sharpening. Note that all these films have several "making of" 360-degree videos linked in the description of each video. Edited March 8, 2019 by Ruotsalainen Werner Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Randy J Tomlinson Posted March 9, 2019 Author Share Posted March 9, 2019 Very Odd. I have used 16mm Formapan 100 in my SR3 and also in a Canon Scoopic (Single Perf) and D8 in a Canon DS8 as well as in a Bolex D8-L. (16mm Double Perf) Never had these Issues. I have my Film from Photoimpex. They sell Formapan R100 as 16mm Single AND as 16mm Double perf. https://www.fotoimpex.com/films/cine-films-super-8-to-35mm/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tim Smyth Posted July 3, 2019 Share Posted July 3, 2019 On 2/22/2019 at 1:04 PM, Mark Dunn said: In that case, have you run the camera before? It seems unlikely the stock would be out of spec. Does it run in the Bolex? If it does then it's the camera that's at fault. If not, very odd. The manufacturing tolerance for 16mm. in width is 0.025mm, thinner than a hair. It seems to me much more likely that the camera is out of adjustment. Hi Mark, I was driving the other day, and something Simon said about old cameras needing servicing struck a chord. After this film incident that day, I did indeed have my camera serviced, and the guy said he cleaned, and lubed the camera, and that it may have never seen service before. Now it is working perfectly, but... on the day of the shoot with the Foma film, it was incredibly hot out, and the camera stopped working, and I now think the camera had simply just had enough. If I had had Kodak stock in the camera that day, I would have thought "Shucks, my camera broke", but since I had film I had never used before, I had assumed (which is almost always a bad thing) that it must be the film making the camera all sluggish. Hence I thought the film was too wide. I was hand-crankng that day, so I could really feel it. After your comment above, on the width of film, and Simon's comment in another thread, it made me think that maybe it was not the film after all, so I put a piece of Foma film in the camera, and it did indeed work smoothly. So apologies if I insulted anyone on this board, and certainly apologies to Foma film. I still have 4 unused rolls from that old project, so I will try to make a new film with it this Summer. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Michael Carter Posted July 10, 2019 Share Posted July 10, 2019 Where can I have my Cine Kodak Special camera serviced? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Member Simon Wyss Posted July 10, 2019 Premium Member Share Posted July 10, 2019 With me, if Switzerland isn’t too far away for you 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Michael Carter Posted July 10, 2019 Share Posted July 10, 2019 Well, X rays won't hurt it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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