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Arriflex 16MM camera model S

Arriflex 16MM camera model S

11/26/2007 Score Card Comments 0 Comment

Troubleshooting the obvious and less obvious:

  • Camera will not run.
    • Check to make sure the motor clamp is snug. The camera motor body is the return electrical path and must be touching the motor housing clamp tight enough for a good electrical contact.
    • The film buckle switch might not have been set properly. Open the sprocket wheel mechanism and then close. You don’t see it but a little plunger resets the film buckle switch to the “ON” position by open and closing the thread mechanism.
  • You can not see an image.
    • Obviously, there is a lens cap and I would hope that that cap is not on the front of the lens.
    • The viewfinder might have a cap over it. Swing the cap out of the way. We have one camera that has a automatic iris that closes out the light from the viewfinder unless the operator places his or her eye up to the viewfinder and presses against the eye cup. The pressure opens the iris and allows the operator to view and image.
    • Each lens has a iris adjustment. Rotate the iris ring to full open.
    • The viewing mechanism employs a front surfaced mirror to direct the lens image to the viewfinder while the film is being pulled down inside the camera. It is a 50/50 percent chance that when the camera is stopped that the shutter is open allowing the lens light to the film but denying you the ability to see anything from the camera viewfinder. The solution is simple. Just rotate the camera motor shaft a bit, that is the little knob at the rear of the motor.
    • Are you using a telephoto lens or zoom in full zoom in setting? It is quite possible to be so closely zoomed into a blank wall or other surface that nothing will appear in the viewfinder. Pan or choose a wide angle lens.
    • The camera has three lens mounts. Make sure that you do not have the lens turret set between lenses.
  • Image is out of focus.
    • Did you set the diopter first? Setting the diopter is the first step you should complete before thinking about using any lens. Just take the camera with or without a taking lens and shoot something blank like a white wall, the north sky if outside, or the sidewalk. Concentrate on a ground glass image in the viewfinder. Make darn sure that that ground glass is as sharp as you can make it for your eye by rotating the diopter ring close to the eye cup. Whenever any camera person uses the camera, that person and only that person must reset the diopter. Never set the diopter for another camera person!
    • Now that the diopter is properly set, do not change it but lock it in place using the lock ring.
    • Take the lens you intend to use and set it to infinity focus. The infinity marking on a lens is a figure “8” laid on its side. Infinity is a fantastic way to calibrate a lens or check its calibration.
    • Take the iris ring and open it ALL the way. Do not stop it down one little bit. It must we wide open to remove any depth of field. [Dept of field is the area between a near and far point from the lens that shows acceptable focus.]
    • Through the viewfinder, look at an object with fine thin lines at infinity. Now lets get real here. Just pick an object at least a quarter a mile away. Power poles, power lines, high rise buildings with windows, edge of a tall building, tall trees, etc. Now we are going to concentrate on the fine lines of one or more far distant objects. Rotate the lens focus ring and rock the ring back and forth until you get the best focus.
    • Is the image sharp? Take into consideration that the image is composed on to a ground glass and the image by definition can not achieve any fantastic detail with this method but it should look sharp.
    • Look at the setting of the lens focus ring. Is it right on the infinity mark? If it is not, either you did the diopter adjustment wrong or the lens is out of calibration.
  • Image seems out of focus (more rigorous check).
    • Obtain a Siemens star target and place it at a convenient distance from the lens. This will require that you also have a tape measure. Look at the lens and look at the lens markings for distance. Choose a distance from the camera corresponding to a mark found on the lens. In this way we can get more precise as to any error. Most cameras have a film plane marking to indicate distance measurements. On the Arri S is on the opposite side of the operator close to the matt box attachment. The mark looks like a circle with a line running through it. One of the tape measure should be placed at that mark. Place the target Siemens star at a precise distance from the camera.
    • Perform the viewfinder ground glass focus as described above. Make darn sure this is as precise as you can get.
    • Now open the lens all the way. We want minimal depth of field.
    • Rotate the focus lens ring back and forth to make the Siemens star appear as sharp focus as you can get. Please remember that ground glass focus method is not going to be immaculate because the ground glass will soften any image. Just concentrate on the lines you see in the lens and stop when the target gets sharp.
    • Now with the lens left where you found the best focus, compare the lens reading to the measured distance of the Siemens star to camera distance. The two distances should be within four inches of each other. It they are not then a problem exists with the camera or the lens. Do not use the camera but return it to checkout and tell them that the tape vs eye measurements do not coincide.

    NOTE: Lens back focus is different with each model camera. Lens back focus is the distance behind the lens where the real sharp focus occurs. This sharp focus must occur on the film emulsion as it sits in the film camera aperture. Occasionally we send in our zoom lenses for collimating. Some zoom lenses are matched for a particular camera. In addition, an exact lens opening on the turret is optimum and sometime comes with a special marking. For most student projects you should not care which zoom lens goes with which camera. In the professional field you will take great care that the lens properly matches the correct camera. In any case, do not use lenses intended for another camera as the back focus might and probably will be wrong.

The information here is for educational and reference use only. Decide on your own how to proceed in performing any repair you face. We do not accept any responsibility for this information being entirely accurate. We hope it is accurate. Most of the information posed here has been noted to be significant, used in the repair process, and to some extent tested for accuracy through the actual discovery and recording of performing a repair. If you decide to use any of the information here, try to keep in mind that a number of factors may change when you attempt the “same” repair. Models do change from apparently being same units. Their are definitely different methods of making a repair. The steps that you should use to achieve a successful and expedient repair might be different. The problem you face with a piece of equipment might be similar but not an exact match to what we faced. Just use common sense and always be a bit skeptical of following our methodology until you feel that you and we share the same viewpoint and tactics.


Cine (Film Equipment), Motion Picture Film, Repair
Arri S, Arri S troubleshooting
Black Mountain 2004, Fat Cat, Cabernet Sauvignon

Black Mountain 2004, Fat Cat, Cabernet Sauvignon

11/12/2007 Score Card Comments 0 Comment

Good flavor. Excellent price. Enjoyable in all respects.

I am the canary in the coal mine. If there is any chemical additive in meat, I will get a headache. This is also some times true with wine. I can not figure out why I get headaches with wine. I do not think additives are the cause, but I am not sure of that. This wine created no headache the next morning.

My doctor told me to drink wine as it might help my symptoms from my blood thickening. In order to get the same benefits from drinking wine, I try to take Longevinex but the cost is close to $1 a pill. I love to sip wine and write this blog. I do not get headaches from Longevinex but some times it is just more fun to sip the wine instead of popping a pill.


Health, Wine
Black Mountain Fat Cat, Wine review
Yellow Tail Chardonnay 2006

Yellow Tail Chardonnay 2006

11/12/2007 Score Card Comments 0 Comment

Simply awful tasting wine. It tasted like it was altered. I picked up the taste of clove. We threw the contents of the bottle out. This is most surprising as Yellow Tail has been an ok wine for us in the past.   Yellow Tail is made in Australia.

My wife and I took a honeymoon cruse on a cruise line that offered French wine with just about every dinner. Before, during and after that cruise just about every French wine we had was disappointing due to the impression that the wines were watered down. That cruise really created the impression we now have about European wines. At other times drinking Italian wines, for me, have had the same impression, anemic flavor. I have suspected that some French vintners, have allegedly stretched their purse strings by being allowed to bottle more through the addition of water to their wine vats. It seems inconceivable to me that in one continent the wines could be so lacking in flavor. Could it be that the more expensive wines are just not watered down? In my opinion, it seems that just about every other continent can offer robust flavors except Europe. We think South Africa, South America, Australia, and New Zeland can pretty much stand up, and even surpass, California wines. We use California wines as a bench mark to judge any other wines because we live in California.

I do hope that no United States winery would modify their wines with any watering down process, chemicals or additives. My wife thinks that air might have reached the wine leading to the altered taste. I am not so sure.


Wine
Yellow Tail Chardonnay 2006, Yellow Tail Wine
California Audits CSU compensation practices. (Nov. 2007)

California Audits CSU compensation practices. (Nov. 2007)

11/07/2007 Score Card Comments 0 Comment

Bureau of State Audits presented its audit report concerning the California State University’s (university) compensation practices.

“Average executive compensation increased by 25.1 percent over this time period, with salary increases contributing the most to the growth. Average compensation for Management Personnel Plan employees (management personnel), such as managers and professional technical staff, increased by 10.4 percent. In contrast, average compensation for tenure-track faculty and other faculty increased by 5.6 percent, and 6.2 percent, respectively.”

“The chancellor’s office establishes systemwide compensation policies but does not have a system in place that allows it to adequately monitor adherence to those policies and to measure their impact on university finances. Specifically, the chancellor’s office does not maintain systemwide compensation data by type and funding source, either by individual or in total. The lack of this data impairs the ability of the chancellor’s office to provide effective oversight of the university’s compensation programs.” (page 18).  “Some management personnel received questionable compensation after they were no longer providing services to the university or while they were transitioning to faculty positions. ” (cover letter).


College & University, Education
California Auditor, compensation packages, CSU
Kimmie’s Coffee Cup in Fullerton, California

Kimmie’s Coffee Cup in Fullerton, California

11/06/2007 Score Card Comments 0 Comment

Kimmie’s Coffee Cup

1605 W. Commonwealth
Fullerton, Ca. 92835
Phone 714-449-1580
Hours: Mon-Fri 5:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Sat and Sun 7 am to 2 p.m.

Reviewed: 11-16-07 at 11:15 a.m.

I found this place by catching an older person, possibly the owner at Spadra’s in downtown Fullerton and asked him where the best place was for breakfast, knowing full well that that would be a difficult question to answer because there were few to choose from. Immediately he said Kimmie’s Coffee Cup and told me how to get there. He said his restaurant, Spadra Restorante, is the best for weekend breakfast but during the week Kimmie’s was the best (Spadra is closed during the week). Unfortunately, it is way out from the down town area by about two to three miles west.

Once I arrived at Kimmie’s, it became apparent to me that  a new condominium complex is being built across the street from the restaurant. Kitty corner from this restaurant is the City of Fullerton maintenance yard.

Kimmie’s Coffee Cup Restaurant, exterior view.

Once inside Kimmie’s, it is a girly girl small diner type restaurant that emotes a women’s’ touch wall-to-wall and ceiling. If you are from a small town, this is the place for you. The walls are pained yellow with cheap linoleum tile floors and thin wood chairs at small tables along the outside walls. It is quite small inside a bit cramped and absolutely not modern. The counter seating looks to be surplus from some B movie. The walls and windows are painted with pictures. Two overhead fans were off. Three cute lamps hang from the ceiling along the counter. They have added a canvas-covered patio out back to add a couple more tables. The parking is simply unacceptable with only 7 to 8 spaces behind the restaurant. This deficiency might require you to park on the street.

This place is for breakfast and lunch only.

There is a radio station playing somewhere but the kitchen clatter can be quite loud at times.

Coffee is ok, not bad, not memorable in any way, and comes in a large coffee cup. Real cream comes in those small plastic containers and is on the table along with artificial French Vanilla creamer along with a sugar shaker, selection of jams, salt and pepper. The tables have a plastic cover table “cloth” with a glass plate on top. The silverware is complete even including the often times missing spoon. Napkin is paper.

I sat in the corner of the dining room so no one could see me type this review on my laptop. For breakfast I choose the scrambler for $7.80. The scrambler is composed of three scrambled eggs scrambled with your choice of cut up bacon or ham or sausage, onion, red skin potatoes, and topped with cheese.

The most expensive item on the menu for both breakfast and lunch is the Cowboy Steak and Eggs for $11.85.

The scrambler was all I got, no side dish just a huge plate of scramble and toast that came on a small side plate. The cheese and components to the scramble seemed fresh. I liked the cheese, which, at a lot of other small restaurants, would taste bland and plastic. The cook did a perfect job making the scramble.

For handicapped persons, this restaurant might be a challenge. The inside of the restaurant is closed in, tight. I did not feel comfortable eating here because I do not like small restaurants. I like spacious areas to dine in. Tables, chairs and counter area were very close to one another making a person with crutches or wheel chair a larger item to navigate. The entrance had a rise to it by about a couple of inches. The restroom hallway was too narrow and the door and space inside the restroom was way too small. It did not have any bars mounted on the walls to help the handicapped. There was only one male and female restroom. I found the restroom to be very clean. It was well lit by a skylight and when I looked up I found a florescent light for nighttime use.

Summary: For breakfast, Kimmie’s Coffee Cup, so far, is the best place for west side downtown Fullerton. I liked the food but thought the building was deficient. I think the owners of this restaurant need to think about moving into a better building. Two options come to mind. They could move into downtown Fullerton and hopefully offer the customer a larger dining room and more parking. The second option is an urban renewal project for its current location. A final note, a better coffee needs to be provided for the customer.

Aside:  I have a friend, let us call him Mike.  He just loves places that are NOT modern but send you back in time to memories in your mind of past events.  When he and I compare restaurants and buildings that, for lack of a better phrase, I will call old, we seldom agree.  Mike likes Kimmie’s Coffee Cup for more reasons than I do.


California, Fullerton, Restaurant Reviews
Fullerton, Fullerton Calif, Kimmie’s Coffee Cup
Cheese Cake Factory, Brea, California for Sunday brunch.

Cheese Cake Factory, Brea, California for Sunday brunch.

11/04/2007 Score Card Comments 0 Comment

Cheese Cake Factory
120 Brea Mall Way
Brea, California, 92821
Phone 714.255.0115
Date: 11-4-07, Sunday.
Brunch at 10 am when the restaurant opened.
This restaurant also offers curbside to-go service.

My wife and I had Sunday brunch right after the restaurant opened. If you have never entered a Cheese Cake Factory Restaurant before, it is a visual treat. I was mildly shocked when I first entered. I did not know if I had entered Disneyland or some other fantasy theme restaurant. I asked our server to tell me to define the interior but he could not. I asked him to check around. He came back a short while later to tell me that the manager defined it as Mediterranean. That definition is a good start but does not convey that much for you so let me come up with some other words:
• Pseudo-Mediterranean fantasy
• Mediterranean hodgepodge
• Mildly opulent modern Mediterranean.
The ceiling is anything but bland. Looking up one sees straight and curved beams, large light wells decorated with drawings that mean nothing and red toned tiles.

Cheesecake Factory inside ceiling view

Image above shows part of the interior ceiling.  (Image taken with BlackBerry cell phone.)

Huge pillars rise from floor to ceiling and at the top are images of a women’s face. We were told that the image is modeled after the owner’s mother’s face. The floor is tile colored in a dark sand color with dark small squares. Walls that have booths might have dark wood paneling. The wall separating the kitchen has low wall to ceiling glass so the kitchen shouting is not that loud. The colors are earthy colors from pastel walls to darker tone woods. Muzak of piano music started our dining experience but it did not take long to loose track of the piped in music as the restaurant filled in quickly and the background chatter masked the music. The seating at booths, and chairs are comfortable. The table edges are curved. Cloth napkins and complete table setting including spoons is included. Bread may or may not appear on you table depending upon your server so if you do not see any and want some, you might have to ask. Both dark and white bread come in a basket. I just love the dark bread. It has a slight sweetness. Our dark bread today, I believe, was yesterday’s bread, not soft. I have noticed that restaurants flush out day old bread the next day, a penalty for arriving soon after the restaurant opens.

My wife ordered Joes Special ($9.95). Because the restaurant just opened for the day, I thought it might be safe to order the eggs benedict with Canadian bacon ($10.95). If this last comment does not make sense to you then read the book Kitchen Confidential. In that book, the author describes the problem with ordering eggs benedict. For beverage, my wife and I ordered coffee but also requested a dish of whipped cream. The coffee is Prebica from Superior Coffee, a Sara Lee Company. I thought the coffee had a very good flavor and came in glass mugs. The drinks cost $2.95 each. The meal before tip cost $28.88.

Both meal dishes were very good. The service was quiet good. I did pick up some shouting from the kitchen, but I liked that. I took it to mean the cooks had passion for what they were doing. On a busy day there can be twelve to fifteen cooks and two expediters. We were told that the cooks stay until about one thirty in the morning cleaning the kitchen to a spotless condition and then another crew comes in to clean it again.

My son liked their omelets. They come to the table looking so smooth it is a wonder how they can make omelets look that way.

Tip: If you roll out of bed late on a Sunday you should know that most restaurants start to have a wait by ten in the morning. Just remember that Cheese Cake Factory opens on Sunday at ten. I have noticed that there is little to no wait up to ten forty five.

Tip: If your order takes a long time on a busy day there is the possibility that the cooks counted an order twice. This means that instead of making two of some dish they made one and the one they failed to make was your dish. If the manager comes out and tells you that the cooks burned your dish, the reality is fifty, fifty that that is true. There is also a good chance that they forgot. They will NOT admit to that as that conveys to the customer that they are not paying attention, which is not true either. It just means that cooks got slammed with orders and lost count.

Summary: Quite enjoyable place with good food, good service and really good coffee.


Brea, California, Restaurant Reviews
Brea, Brea California, Cheese Cake Factory, Prebica coffee

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