With the projectors facing each other, the inching knobs turn in opposite
directions, so some kind of differential reverse gimmick would be required.
Easy enough with bicycle chain and cogs.
On Wed, 3 Jun 2015 09:08:10 +0900, Jeff Kreines wrote:
You can also use a flexible shaft —
You can also use a flexible shaft — might give you more, um, flexibility in
positioning projectors — or use chains and extra sprockets to redirect the
chains. Then again you could replace the motors with steppers and lock them
together….
> On Jun 3, 2015, at 9:03 AM, mariah garnett wrote:
>
Very cool Mariah!
That is defiantly an Eiki Slot load in this video.
Roger
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_
From: mariah garnett
Sent: Tuesday, June 2, 2015 8:03 PM
Subject: Re: [Frameworks] AC lock projector
To: Experimental Film Discussion List
http://mariahgarnet
http://mariahgarnett.com/encounters-i-may-or-may-not-have-had-with-peter-berlin/
if you scroll don you can see images and video and text about the piece as
it was installed 5 years ago. i'm thinking of reprising it this summer but
got some kinks to work out
On Tue, Jun 2, 2015 at 4:16 PM, k.
Mariah, can you share the details of your show with us? Sounds interesting..
Also: "If you link the inching knobs together with bicycle chains, you can
mechanically synchronize any number of projectors, just be careful
starting them and don't get your fingers caught. Used to be very
common
I'm very interested in this conversation! Scott how would you go about chaining
the inching knobs on the Eiki Slot Loads? Do you have to modify the projector
or do you take off the back cover?
Thanks!
Roger
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On Tue, Jun 2, 2015 at 5:21 AM -0700, "Scott Dorsey" wrote:
Some of
Some of the eikis will more or less synchronize. The 5-series B&H
projectors will, but the 3-series ones won't at all. The Pageants
are pretty close to synchronous.
But of course this all depends on your starting them precisely together
as well as them staying locked to line. I'd just chain th