- 21
- 92 418
Owen Morgan
Registrace 4. 01. 2008
KF5CZO
kf5czo.blogspot.com/
kf5czo.blogspot.com/
Printing the puzzle box core.
Printing the puzzle box core with the Crealty Ender 5 Pro 3D Printer.
zhlédnutí: 52
Video
IHS Office - Enclave Parkway - Houston TX
zhlédnutí 139Před 7 lety
I created this video with the CZcams Video Editor (czcams.com/users/editor)
Bear Creek Floodwaters - Houston TX - 04/19/2016
zhlédnutí 291Před 8 lety
Bear Creek - Behind Sheridan Elementary School
JingleBells - Arduino Uno & 2 x 8 channel SSR boards
zhlédnutí 233Před 8 lety
December - Katy Texas 2015 16 Channels of lights driven by Vixen 3 through an arduino uno and 2 x 8 channel SSR boards. 700 feet of wire.
Moving clouds from the IHS office.
zhlédnutí 19Před 9 lety
Time lapse video of clouds moving from the IHS Enclave office.
Atwater Kent Type M Loud Speaker
zhlédnutí 127Před 9 lety
Playing with the aid of a matching transformer.
South Texas Balloon Launch Team - Launch Number 28
zhlédnutí 205Před 12 lety
The South Texas Balloon Launch Team will release the balloon at 3 p.m. Saturday near the oil rice grain silos at the western end of No Label Brewery, 5373 First St.
Kodak - How Film is Made - 1958 - kf5czo.blogspot.com
zhlédnutí 74KPřed 12 lety
Kodak 1958 factory film This fascinating 1958 documentary titled, "How Film is Made", that documents the production process and birth of photographic and cinematic film, was initially discovered as part of a heritage in the Netherlands. Although its exact source and purpose are as of yet still unknown, it may have been an instructional film for new employees at Kodak's factories world wide, and...
Radio at War - Radio Corporation of America - Circa 1944
zhlédnutí 494Před 12 lety
Two brothers discover Amateur Radio at home then join the armed forces where they complete radio school and finally go into battle. An obvious dramatization but it does show interesting scenes of equipment and facilities available in the mid 1940's. Producer: Ganz (William J.) Co. Sponsor: Radio Corporation of America (RCA) Creative Commons license: Public Domain kf5czo.blogspot.com
Espey R-366/TRR-5 Radio Receiver - kf5czo.blogspot.com
zhlédnutí 1,3KPřed 12 lety
Espey R-366/TRR-5 Radio Receiver - kf5czo.blogspot.com
KARS Summer Field Day - kf5czo.blogspot.com
zhlédnutí 155Před 12 lety
KARS Summer Field Day - kf5czo.blogspot.com
KARS WINTER FIELD DAY 2011 - kf5czo.blogspot.com
zhlédnutí 936Před 13 lety
KARS WINTER FIELD DAY 2011 - kf5czo.blogspot.com
Timelapse - 1 Day - Front Yard - 20100318
zhlédnutí 32Před 14 lety
Timelapse - 1 Day - Front Yard - 20100318
Aeradio - TAA's DHA-3 - Position Report with Ken Munro - kf5czo.blogspot.com
zhlédnutí 760Před 14 lety
Aeradio - TAA's DHA-3 - Position Report with Ken Munro - kf5czo.blogspot.com
Super 👌
My film is 16 MM double perf. It's very hard to find it and I wish I could find a modern machine to convert single perf 1R to double perf 2R. Armed forces cameramen used black duffle bags to exchange the 53 feet of film in film magazines. You crawled inside with a Pyrex and a screwdriver. This is how films like Memphis Belle were mastered.
Incredible
#MartianIntelligence #IllegalCrimePrevention #CriminalIntentions #GuiltyIntentions #DeadlyIntentions #Awareness #CorruptionPreventionAmerica #ConvictConductivity #InmateConduct #BetrayalIntentions #PrisonIncarceration #PrisonConfinement #CriminalIdentification #Alien #Suspicion #FinancialFraud #IllegalCashManufacturing #IllegalCoinManufacturing #GrandLarceny #Extortion #BrainIQ #IncomeInvoice #Scammer #Forgery #MoneyLaundering #FinancialCrime #GrandTheftAutoCrime #Burglary #Robbery #RobberyIntentions #Awareness #CIA #FBI #ProfessionalLawEnforcement #SuspectIdenificationIntelligenceExpert #America czcams.com/video/C5-aUt-3OJ8/video.html
Thanks Kodak, now I will take over your market to me.
Yo tengo uno igual funcionando. Lo usaba como receptor de comunicación Radioaficionado LU4JDZ en la banda de 80 metros 3'5 mhz
Niederländisch oder? Kann ich verstehen.
How awarsome is this. Working blind for hours in complete darkness every day.
Nitrite film is very flammable so don’t do it
That's an *awfully* heavy Welsh accent you have there, Owen... ;-)
hahahha
How many of you are here after the Veritasium video?
Awesome making film of Kodak Film :) (no pun intended) I didn't know film making was such a Huge process. Makes me appreciate my photographs in my physical albums much more precious <3
Is there an English version?
9:06 guy just dunks his unprotected hand into a bath of silver bromide and silver nitrate to take a sample. The balls on these guys
it's mostly water, clearly it's nothing major
14 tons a week?? I wonder if it would even be worth it to try and break down old film stock to recover the silver.
I've heard that when they develop film they do recycle the silver.
What language is the narrator speaking?
Dutch 😁
I wonder what happens with those beautiful machines
Of course, the use of cotton bales in solvent pertains to the cellulose tri-acetate film base. Later, polyester, or “ESTAR” base was entirely polymer base, using no cellulose.
Is this why later films had more Brown shade and plastic feel ?
Is kinda interesting how plastic was made by cotton, but I didn't know polyester is made from non-cotton
I used to run a photo lab, and a Kodak tech rep once told me, "We know when we do things a certain way it works, but we don't always know why." In other words, one of the largest industrial firms in the world was practicing alchemy!
That's not alchemy, that's just ignorance.
@@RogerBarraud If you say so, but Kodak in their prime thought is was ignorance worth spending $1m a day in research funds on.
@@RogerBarraud On the contrary, how do you think we have learned new things in different fields over the years?
@@RogerBarraud Perfect, it is just ignorance.
Very nice thank you!
I wonder if they employed quite a few blind persons for certain sections in the process?
no blind people are all stupid.. fuck them all !
Blind people were often employed by photo labs to load the exposed film into the processing machines... the trouble was, the couldn't tell if they'd left the darkroom lights on!
@@livelongandprosper70 Are you serious? I presume you know "all blind people" and have given them intelligence tests? Because otherwise, your opinion is just bullshit, and it is, in fact, bullshit.
Yes - it is explained in Kodak”s print publication “Making Kodak Film” that they pioneered the employment of blind people as a special qualification, for their comfort in operating complex and dangerous machinery in total darkness.
its funny how things become obsolete.there was a whole industry behind films.
Film still has a mystique about it, because Eastman Kodak was fundamentally practicing alchemy (see comment, above)! Things like whether the cattle, who get made into the gelatin that holds the emulsion to the acetate base, grazed on plants of the mustard family, actually affected the ISO of the film emulsion! Kodak was fanatical about vertical integration, owning herds and silver mines. I think the best explanation for their doom was that they were fundamentally a chemistry company for about a century, and they couldn't make the transition to making other products, or digital cameras, like Fuji has.
@@MalcolmBrenner so he was a bit batty then... sounds like the company had a mathmatical distrust and an analougue love... a bit of a fundamental science approach (maybe "alchemy" like you say).... no wonder they where so slow to develop digital cameras, i remeber being really shocked waiting for kodak to enter the market and when they did their cameras where dreadful
it like an alien technology^^
Wow! Very impressive and informative. And on a grand scale.
neat! this your work?
+Luis Cerezo Yes, its a extra curriculum project for Emma and I to learn a bit more about Arduino microprocessors and interfacing with the real world.
That last line still rings true: "Shoot it now, while you still have the chance!"
Man, that is so true, gives me cold shivers down the back... How long will we still have it?
@@v-g-z3689 Film sales have skyrocketed since these comments
@@goldenhourkodak True! But with losses...
Living in Oklahoma Cit some 40 years ago, I bought a set of relatively unknown speakers at a high end electronics store, called Norman Laboratories, Lab 10's with two 10" woofers. I still have the speakers. They still sound great with a Kenwood 9400, but nobody seems to know a thing about them. They were not common, but not uncommon, either in that era. Does anyone have any information?
I have some Norman Lab speakers and they sound amazing! but I cant find much info on them, I picked them up for 40$ for the pair, don't know how much they are worth' any help would be great :)
whoa! this is really awesome! I love film and I still shoot film, but where is the safety in that factory?!?! bare hands, no respirators, that one man touching radioactive material with his bare hands! I'm glad I didn't work in a factory in the 50's
it was 50's before soy was invented!
Sadly kodak park is now less than half that size shown in the video. The emulsion and roller buildings still exist as seen from Ridge road, and the film division still puts out an extremely limited amount of film at the elm grove location. Kodak park to my knowledge no longer produces film. With Perez out of the picture maybe kodak will return to its former glory.
They still make film. And after years of shrinking, the market for film is growing strong... you just can't get the same look with digital that you do with film (technically you can, but you're talking about messing with all sorts of settings to replicate specific chemical processes that influence the look)
iii film is much more prevalent in movie film photography nowadays than in still photography
@@punman5392 True, professional enthusiasts like Christopher Nolan still use film for their big budget films !
2020 film has no future
"sadly" lol, people move on ....... some professionals still use it for various results, but it's just analougue nostalgia now
Kodak film is now kodak alaris :)
Hi Pioneerz450, Kodak Alaris just sells the photographic film made by Eastman Kodak.
Do you think that radio has any significan $ value? If so how much?
God sacve the Film!
Just wonderful, especially seeing the final product - VP620, completed. I shot a few rolls of that product myself. I liked the music, too, almost certainly classical and likely PD. Too bad the original English audio is missing Also get a load of the workers dumping silver into a vat of nitric acid without wearing any glasses!
That was the 50’s for you. You didn’t wear protective equipment because you were a “real man”.
Check my channel for an exploration of a Kodak factory.
Amazing!
Thank you
Thanks for posting. Quite a radio, definitely shows the Scott heritage.
I also have one of these
Nice Oliver typewriter. Same model used in the film Naked Lunch renamed as a Mujahideen that typed in Arabic. It turned itself into a sex blob until Fadela screws up the party. S5 amp sucks though. I have a K-16Ls with tone control option. It's for sale. Very thin and no low end. I prefer my rebuilt almost mint Heathkit SA-2 with Mullards,Telefunken and Tung Sol tubes. It's the shit!!!
Not really a fan of mixing printed circuits with tubes, the heat tends to cause problems with solder joints and the foil traces.
jimmy hendrix!