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Projector do Planetário Calouste Gulbenkian (Lisboa)
Planetarium Calouste Gulbenkian's Projector (Lisbon - Portugal)
The hard disk laser projector, assembled into a handy toolbox form-factor. Includes dire safety warnings, and a supply current meter.
Just found this projector at an estate sale. Looked like this right out of the box and had about 30sec of film on it from a family fishing trip.
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On display in theater window
Fulton, MO
Actually, this doesn't look like it has any means to project. Maybe it's just a rewinder. Anyone know?
Projector lenses compared. I was lucky to get a box full and did not pay ebay prices for each one. Looking for ring bokeh and other qualities. Focus is like free lensing due to a quick mount set up, tilting changed the frame and amount of out of focus. white balance is wildly differing on a couple of frames, only +,- 100 on others and as you can see the back light changes gradually.
edit note: I found the sharpness to be disappointing on most. I prefer modern lens resolution but the older lenses have imperfect qualities that can be attractive and feel real
Experimental shot with a Lastolite Strobo Gobo Projector, using the parallel lines gobo. The light was provided by 2x Lastolite stripboxes with 580EXII on remote manual mode, controlled and triggered by Hahnel Viper radio controller.
The Gobo'ed main light is a 600EX-RT in E-TTL mode. It took many frames to get the lines where I wanted them. Thanks to Laura for her patience.
These are the still in tact projectors at the Sutton Motor In. The massive stone entryway to this (now abandoned) Drive In is what brought it its notoriety.
Sutton, MA
This is the side of an old 35mm projector in my office (Cross Films). Taken with Cooper's collar camera.
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My 50mm f/1.2 projector lens mounted on a helicoid & focused to infinity. Lot's more extension available
This 35mm 1920s film projector is on display at the Museum of Transport & Technology...Auckland 31/01/15
The IMAX GT projector. The pipes going into the roof are to cool the overall projector and bulb. The thick one is air, the smaller ones are water. The room next to the projection room has a full pump system including a dedicated feed of water, separate to the normal city water system.
The Xenon bulb inside costs £3,500 (yes, three and a half thousand pounds), and comes from Belgium. It lasts 900* hours, so it does need to be replaced fairly often. They used to source the bulbs from the US but their ones have a shorter lifespan (though they were a bit cheaper).
To the left a bit, you can see the 35mm (standard cinema film) projector, which is used mostly for advertising and trailers before the movie. On top of that is another generic office projector, which is used for displaying the "welcome to the IMAX" PowerPoint show that shows upcoming films, and so on.
*I think it was 900 hours. It might be 600 hours. I can't really remember what Sally (our "tour guide" of sorts) said, but I'm fairly sure it was 900.
This projector was sitting in the lobby of the theatre in town that shows independent films. It was such an interesting machine; thought I'd see if I could capture it.
This projector will not operate once disconnected.
Este proyector no funcionará una vez desconectado.