Chinon 7500 Projector Manual

Posted on by
Chinon 7500 Projector Manual Rating: 7,8/10 1849reviews
Chinon 7500 Projector ManualChinon 7500 Projector Manual

7500, for sale, Buy Chinon, prices, mm projector 7500 Brand Chinon, Film Format 8mm, Model 7500, Country/Region of Manufacture Japan, Review mpn:7500 for sale. EPHOTOzine has partnered up with OldTimerCameras.com to bring you a selection of Chinon 7500 instruction manuals and related photographic literature for almost every. EPHOTOzine has partnered up with OldTimerCameras.com to bring you a selection of Chinon instruction manuals and. Chinon camera manual. 7500; Chinon 7800. Jun 15, 2011 Commvault Backup Software on this page. Chinon 7500 Sound Projector Super 8mm. Chinon 7500 Sound Projector Super 8mm. Skip navigation. Chinon Sound 7500 Super 8mm Projector.

8mm Forum: Chinon 7500 projector » » » Chinon 7500 projector Author Topic: Chinon 7500 projector Film Handler From: Canada Registered: Nov 2004 posted July 29, 2005 10:10 AM Thinking about buying a Chinon 7500 projector. Bilingual Malayalam English Dictionary on this page. I'm not familiar with these at all. Anyone have any input on the quality of these machines? Thanks! IP: Darth 8mm From: Ohio, USA Registered: Jan 2005 posted July 29, 2005 03:23 PM Well. Chinon made OK projectors back in the day, but they're really average machines, according to most people. The 7500 is a typical consumer model, one track playback/recording, an f1.3 lens, (I think) a 120V/150W DNE bulb - you might want to consider projectors using EFR bulbs as these are the cheapest and easiest to replace - and then, apparently, some Chinons tend to misthread and chew up film (not often, but occasionally). I have a Chinon SP-330MV, it's a nice little projector actually but its sound quality is somewhat lacking, and I've been pointed by other forum members to a design flaw regarding the film gate - the film runs between two pairs of fixed metal pins exactly 8mm apart, whereas most film gate designs have the fixed pins on one side and moving, spring-loaded pins on the other side to allow for variations in film width (in the order of fractions of millimetres).

So the Chinon's film gate will cause film that's too wide to bow slightly, decreasing focus - conversely, film that's too narrow will weave sideways and decrease image stability. The effects may be barely noticeable (I've not seen this myself, really) but it goes to show that while Chinons are OK projectors, they're not too well thought out in design. Bottom line, go for an Elmo Incidentally, what features are you looking for in your next projector? -------------------- Call me Phoenix.