Carlos 8mm wrote:You can get similar results without undesiderable effects "flashing" the film before or after shooting.
no you can't... flashing lowers contrast and adds some shadow detail in the whole picture while an removed shutter will expose the film during transport, resulting in streaks... no flashing in the shadow area if there are no lights above or below the shadow area. actually we shouldn't be using the word "flashing" at all in this context.
Mitch Perkins wrote:How many stops does one gain with a 360 deg. shutter, as opposed to a 180 deg. shutter?
to be technically correct, none.
if you had a camera where the film transport could happen in a 1/1000sec or so, you'd gain nearly one full stop (but film cameras need at least 1/100sec for the transport, so if you're lucky you get 1/2 stop extra).. this is what happens with video cameras if you set the shutter to 1/25sec (or 1/30 in ntsc land) since they dont have to close the shutter for transport. most video cameras throw away half of the vertical resolution if you do that though.
How many stops does one gain simply flashing the film to an arbitrary light source, (not a scene), of say 3200 K for 1/24th of a second before/after shooting?
the concept of flashing is not that simple - you can't just flash for "1/24th sec". how bright is the light, at what distance, what sensitivity is the film?
a common way to indicate the strenght of flashing is to read a graycard and underexpose X stops. with reversal film, flashing at 3 stops under might be a good start, but it depends on a lot of factors, so tests are absolutely necessary.
again, you do not really "gain" f-stops since you change the characteristic of a stock, and more often than not the results are not pretty (you need some black in the picture somewhere). it's cool if you like to experiment, but if it was such a great idea everybody would be doing it, no? ;)
++ christoph ++