• WinAit/Wolverine/Reflecta/etc. 8mm digitisers - getting 1:1 pixel ratio

    From J. P. Gilliver@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jan 4 17:17:06 2024
    I've finally acquired one of these machines, to convert my old standard
    and super 8 films.

    They produce 1080p (1440×1080 20fps) files. (The very early models
    produced 720p files.)

    The sensor is stated to be 3.53 Megapixels (2304 × 1536) 1/3" CMOS. (I
    believe the Kodak Reelz machine has a bigger sensor, but still produces
    1080p files, so one wonders why they bothered with a bigger sensor. The
    other machines - Wolverine, WinAit, Reflecta, Digisomething, and own
    brands - are all the same machine under assorted badges. I think WinAit
    is the actual manufacturer - Chinese, of course.)

    They provide X, Y, and Z controls - X and Y for framing, and Z (may be
    called something else) for zooming in and out, so you can eliminate or
    include the frame border, sprocket holes, etcetera. (Some cameras used
    to actually shoot into the space between the holes.)

    It seems pretty certain that these adjustments are in software only -
    I'm pretty sure there is no physical zoom movement, let alone very fine
    stepper motor control for framing: in other words, they just do the X
    and Y by selecting different parts of the image, and Z by "digital
    zoom".

    Since framing/cropping/zoom can be done afterwards in post, some have
    suggested one should capture fully zoomed out, on the basis of not
    throwing away any information at the scanning stage. (There's also some implication that by including a fair amount of the sprocket hole [which
    appears as a white patch], one can to some extent override certain
    elements of the automation - exposure and colour control - which these machines' firmware insists on inserting. (Such corrections being better implemented in post.)

    It occurs to me, however, that the least resampling distortion would be
    a "zoom" that causes the machine to use exactly 1440×1080 of the
    sensor's pixels - neither interpolating ("zoomed" in) nor combining
    ("zoomed" out) - and that, indeed, using a "zoom" that was just one side
    or the other of these would in fact be the worst.

    Anyone know how to determine what "zoom" level hits this? (Maybe the
    "default setting"?)

    I presume, when broadcasters use home movie footage (e. g. in
    "documentaries" about some celebrity [such as Julie Andrews]), they use
    a conventional continuous-motion telecine machine - right? Presumably
    with _optical_ enlargement for the smaller format, so that the
    line-of-cells sensor is still used for at least a fair amount of the
    image.
    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    "This situation absolutely requires a really futile and stoopid gesture be done on somebody's part." "We're just the guys to do it." Eric "Otter" Stratton (Tim Matheson) and John "Bluto" Blutarsky (John Belushi) - N. L's Animal House (1978)

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  • From John Williamson@21:1/5 to J. P. Gilliver on Thu Jan 4 22:20:12 2024
    On 04/01/2024 17:17, J. P. Gilliver wrote:
    The sensor is stated to be 3.53 Megapixels (2304 × 1536) 1/3" CMOS. (I believe the Kodak Reelz machine has a bigger sensor, but still produces
    1080p files, so one wonders why they bothered with a bigger sensor. The
    other machines - Wolverine, WinAit, Reflecta, Digisomething, and own
    brands - are all the same machine under assorted badges. I think WinAit
    is the actual manufacturer - Chinese, of course.)

    All else being equal, bigger pixels produce less noise (More photons hit
    the sensor per exposure, smoothing out the random errors.), and a bigger
    sensor allows more latitude for errors in the optical side of things.

    --
    Tciao for Now!

    John.

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  • From J. P. Gilliver@21:1/5 to John Williamson on Fri Jan 5 03:59:49 2024
    In message <kvop8uFfsp8U1@mid.individual.net> at Thu, 4 Jan 2024
    22:20:12, John Williamson <johnwilliamson@btinternet.com> writes
    On 04/01/2024 17:17, J. P. Gilliver wrote:
    The sensor is stated to be 3.53 Megapixels (2304 × 1536) 1/3" CMOS. (I
    believe the Kodak Reelz machine has a bigger sensor, but still produces
    1080p files, so one wonders why they bothered with a bigger sensor. The
    other machines - Wolverine, WinAit, Reflecta, Digisomething, and own
    brands - are all the same machine under assorted badges. I think WinAit
    is the actual manufacturer - Chinese, of course.)

    All else being equal, bigger pixels produce less noise (More photons
    hit the sensor per exposure, smoothing out the random errors.), and a
    bigger sensor allows more latitude for errors in the optical side of
    things.

    Sorry, I was imprecise: I meant the Kodak machine claims a sensor with
    more pixels - I don't know if it's physically bigger. (If the same size,
    then more pixels will of course mean they are actually smaller.)
    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    the plural of 'anecdote' is not 'evidence'. Professor Edzart Ernst, prudential magazine, AUTUMN 2006, p. 13.

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  • From Graham.@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 6 15:35:53 2024
    Two questions if I may.
    What's the maximum reel size, and how long does it take to scan
    each frame?

    When I looked into these scanners some time ago, I decided they
    were too slow plus I would need to re-spool some 400 foot (7 inch
    dia) reels onto smaller ones.

    Instead I just used a projector and my camcorder with all the
    automatics disabled, pointing at a small screen.


    I'm quite pleased with the results.

    --

    Graham.
    %Profound_observation%

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  • From J. P. Gilliver@21:1/5 to Graham. on Sat Jan 6 16:30:27 2024
    In message <unbs0n$li85$1@dont-email.me> at Sat, 6 Jan 2024 15:35:53,
    Graham. <graham-usenet@mail.com> writes
    Two questions if I may.
    What's the maximum reel size, and how long does it take to scan
    each frame?

    The original and still commonest model - 5 inches. (Which is the biggest
    I have, so fine by me.) Basically because the spindles are at the corner
    of the device. Many people in the early days used various means - the
    most common being, I think, being a hand-winding machine - of allowing
    bigger reels. (With either ingenious ways of driving the takeup spool,
    or just feeding into a clean box.) Some models now come with a swing-out
    arm that allows a bigger feed reel.

    All these machines - both the WinAit variations (Wolverine, Reflecta,
    etc.), and the Kodak Reelz - scan at 2 f. p. s., i. e. one eighth (for
    standard 8) or one ninth (for super 8 silent) nominal speed. (One
    twelfth for super 8 sound, but I don't know if anyone's doing that on
    these, as they don't do the sound anyway.

    When I looked into these scanners some time ago, I decided they
    were too slow plus I would need to re-spool some 400 foot (7 inch
    dia) reels onto smaller ones.

    They're certainly slow, see above. Also - allegedly, I haven't used mine
    yet - tend to jam on splices or any similar irregularities, so I doubt
    you'd get a 400 through in one go.

    Instead I just used a projector and my camcorder with all the
    automatics disabled, pointing at a small screen.

    That (or use of a mirror device) was the only way available before these machines came along.

    I'm quite pleased with the results.

    The main concern has been the inevitable loss of sync., resulting in a
    beat in brightness (and perhaps jerkiness/blur in frames at the minima
    of sync). Not really having tried it, I can't say. (Plus I don't have
    any HD camcorder [and my projectors are on their last legs], and I feel
    the format is quite capable, at its best, of far better than SD; I'm
    sure most of my films are far from perfect, but I think in resolution
    terms they're quite good. (Mostly from the 70s, with mostly 10 ASA film
    for the Std8 ["25" - really 40 with a filter - for the Sup8].))
    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    I would have written you a shorter letter but I didn't have the time.
    - Blaise Pascal in Lettres Provinciales

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  • From Graham.@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 6 22:31:54 2024

    The main concern has been the inevitable loss of sync., resulting in a
    beat in brightness (and perhaps jerkiness/blur in frames at the minima
    of sync). Not really having tried it, I can't say. (Plus I don't have
    any HD camcorder [and my projectors are on their last legs], and I feel
    the format is quite capable, at its best, of far better than SD; I'm
    sure most of my films are far from perfect, but I think in resolution
    terms they're quite good. (Mostly from the 70s, with mostly 10 ASA film
    for the Std8 ["25" - really 40 with a filter - for the Sup8].))


    Thanks for that.
    I bought a Dixons Prinz Magnon Lv cheaply off Ebay and used my Sony
    Handycam, seting the up close together to reduce trapizoidal and
    keystone effects and of course with manual focus and exposure.

    I used my osciloscope with a photocell (actually a PV solar cell from
    a garden light) to pick op stray light, and set the X timbase to
    "Line" (ie 50Hz mains) and adjusted the motor speed to get a roughly
    stationary Lissajous figure on the scope
    The projector shutter has 3 blades
    16.6666x3=50
    it meant the film was running slightly slow, 16.666 rather than 18 FPS
    but strobing was at an acceptale level

    In post I applied a small ammount of cropping and colour correction

    --
    Graham.
    %Profound_observation%

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