Hi Pav, I've seen your website once before. I was intrigued, but lost track of it – so glad you have posted here. I read before that you were using the Samsung NEX mini as a capture device whilst I was researching cameras with electronic shutters to be used for frame grabbing.Pj wrote:I have dabbled with DIY frame by frame scanning of Super 8 and 16mm for some time now, when I first started I modified a Chinon Super 8 projector, but in the end I just found there was too much to do to the projector, the old AC motor need to be changed, the gate needed to be enlarged, the shutter disk need to be removed and then I found getting a decent diffused light source and micro-switch too tricky to fit in. I decided to build a simple film channel - a new enlarged gate that is kinder and gentler to film, I had a gate machined out of aluminium and I illuminated the frame by a simple LED light taken from a Veho film scanner. I used various machine vision cameras but earlier this year I started to experiment with CSC (compact system cameras - mirror-less) that have lens inter-changeability and use a Schneider S Componon 50mm enlarger lens [reverse mounted], I have found the results pretty good, each film frame is saved as a JPEG or in RAW on the cameras SD card. It’s a simple and easy set up and it’s great not having to tie up the computer during transfers too.
Pav
I'd be interested to hear more about how your system works. I have looked at the photographs but cannot workout how the film is advanced and positioned accurately at each step.
Also, why do you think a global shutter is important? And doesn't this usually exclude CMOS sensors, such as used in the Samsung NEX mini?
You state, on your site, that the material you scan is used for preview purposes. So, my last question (for now) is, why you think professional scanning is still preferable to using your own system?