Horribly expensive and makes the print unusable for conventional projection, 
tho.



> On Dec 13, 2016, at 1:18 PM, Scott Dorsey <klu...@panix.com> wrote:
> 
> Yes, there is 16mm dts available.  The print is printed with a standard 
> optical track which contains timecode information.  That timecode is then
> used to lock the dts decoder.  Unlike with 35mm dts, there is no analogue
> audio track left on the film so if anything goes wrong with the dts track
> you're in trouble.
> 
> Any theatre with a 16mm projector and a standard dts decoder can install 
> the dts E376 "timecode preamplifier" which takes the optical head output
> from the projector and spits out regenerated tc2 timecode to the dts unit.
> 
> I have shown 16mm dts films at festivals but never actually made one, so I
> don't know how bad a job it is getting all the synch perfect.
> --scott
> 
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