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.
Based on my experience years ago with two Bell and Howell slide cube projectors, I would suggest that they be avoided. Both were purchased new, both soon developed tendencies to jam. Garnted different preferences exist, but I find the carousels easier to load and easier to correct loading errors. Do not make the mistake of dropping two sllides into the same carousel slot - the resulting jam is fixable but frustrating. In reference to another post, the Leitz Prdovit is probably a better projector/lens, but carousel loading is easier.
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.
Emphatically agreed.
Regards, Ed
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