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- Who forges their slides and frames - 1911Forum
Smith and Ruger are the major casting forging players stateside would that indicate that these manufacturers are getting slides and frames from one of those two players only? so a colt, or baer or wilson is actually a S W slide frame? what about caspian? do they forge their own and then supply to the big boys?
- US Military Slide Replacement Analysis - 1911Forum
Pre-1925 slides typically lasted only between 5-6000 rounds WW2-era slides doubled that life expectancy, but post-war and modern slides easily last in the tens of thousands of rounds
- 35mm slide question - mounting and scanning - Photo. net
Recently I started shooting 35mm slide film for the first time in almost 20 years, and am trying to work out some of my processing details My main goal with the slides will be to scan them at home with my dedicated film scanner, and make occasional large prints Having said that, I have to admit
- Maximum usable resolution from old 35mm slides - Photo. net
Hi everyone, I and my son recently tried scanning a bunch of old 35mm slides on an Epson V600, and were highly disappointed with the results It claims a resolution up to 6400 x 9600, but for practical purposes (including using a SilverFast USAF 1951 target resolution slide), I found it only capa
- 1911A1 with no markings on the slide - 1911Forum
WW2-era slides had the manufacturer's name on them Post-war slides usually just had the military drawing number on them, 7790314 It's entirely possible that some slides were sourced with no numbers or markings on them or else they were removed during refinishing
- How to tell which side is the emulsion - Photo. net
"The emulsion side is duller than the base side on both slides and negatives, but it's often difficult to tell on color film The exception is Kodachrome slide film, on which the emulsion side is obvious If you hold a Kodachrome slide at an angle to the light and can see the image in slight relief, then you're looking at the emulsion side
- Hard Slide history? - 1911Forum
What we know is, slides prior to the hard slide tend to crack, which is why we advise not to shoot valuable pistols All those many thousands of U S pistols with replacement slides is the proof
- Developed slides in the freezer? - Photo. net
Is it recommended to store developed, framed slides in freezer? What about fridge? I know many people store unexposed film in the freezer, with no problems, if you respect the thaw processes But since framed slides are not in the cartridge anymore, it seems to be a different deal So, it is poss
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