Marc, An old Bell & Howell slide cube projector or Kodak carosel will be just fine. The slide cubes are easy to load and sort, carosels are less so. The big images will amaze you.
The task of viewing more than 100 slides is daunting. I would get a magnifying loop and a light box for sorting thru them. The whole kit would be under US$75 new. Spread the 36 slides out on the light box, look at them overall, check the interesting ones with the magnifying loop, pick-out the best to display in the projector. I've been sorting slides like this for a while. With a box of 36, 12 go into the trash, 12 I hold onto because I'm not ruthless enough in editing, 12 I keep as good, of which only 2 or 3 are REALLY good. If you've got 10 boxes of slides to sort, use the light box, not the projector! Regards, Bob S. [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: > I have quite the treasure trove of 35 mm slides I've inherited from > various family members that I'd like to take a look at. I don't have any > experience with slides in general and projectors specifically. I'd > appreciate it if list members would weigh in with what features I should > look for as well as any brand recommendations for projectors available > in the U.S.

