#219

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  • Опубликовано: 5 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 273

  • @sherrlon
    @sherrlon 10 лет назад +27

    This reminds me of the library in the late 70's. I would spend hours watching those filmstrips with tapes and the huge heavy earphones. Thanks for sharing this!

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  8 лет назад

      Thank you for replying!!

    • @bt8406
      @bt8406 5 лет назад

      Yes the ear phones, i was telling my girls about the headphones too.

    • @sherry6997
      @sherry6997 5 лет назад

      @@tntamusements Do they still use these in school today?

    • @worldstallestdrummer
      @worldstallestdrummer 4 года назад

      yes i remember my fave being the encyclopedia browns

    • @JuanHerrera-pf6hc
      @JuanHerrera-pf6hc 4 года назад

      Those vinyl plastic headphones brings back memories

  • @Schush
    @Schush 4 года назад +8

    This definitely brought some memories back here. We had these kind of projectors... I also remember the ones with the big reels of film. I'd love to find some of the history ones I used to watch in the late '70s

  • @VectraQS
    @VectraQS 5 лет назад +9

    I may have been one of the last to see these in a classroom. My third grade teacher brought one in around 2008 or so.

  • @Musicradio77Network
    @Musicradio77Network 10 лет назад +5

    I remember filmstrips when I was in school. The teacher can play a tape while following along with the film, just like they did with the Disney Read-Along stories. If you want to use it as a set of slides, you need a Kodak Carousel slide projector to use it. All you have is a scissors and the slide cards to go with the film. I have a Kodak Carousel 650 slide projector that I got for $3 at a yard sale and it still works.

  • @0mniP0t3nt
    @0mniP0t3nt 6 лет назад +4

    I'm a child of the mid-80's, so these were relics of the recent-past when I was attending school. However, I distinctly remember seeing two or three of these standing on a wooden desk in (of course) the small library we had and I distinctly remember asking the "Librarian" what those were. After explaining them to me, I asked if I could try one. She, sadly, said; "No," and followed up this denial with saying it was too difficult, time-consuming to setup, especially for just a single kid. So that is the extent of MY memory of these things. I never had the opportunity ever again to try these as, shortly thereafter; the school chucked them out and replaced them with Macintosh computers, which I admit was probably the better choice overall. Regardless, thanks for making/uploading this video Todd; it was greatly appreciated as now I feel like I can joyfully close that chapter of my early-childhood.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  6 лет назад +1

      Yes...sadly they have gone the way of the Do-DO bird!

  • @jscott1000
    @jscott1000 7 лет назад +1

    This did bring back some memories. I remember watching these in the 70s in school. I usually got the job of advancing the projector as we didn't have the automatic kind. VHS was still a bit off from being commonly available by the time I graduated High School, (1980). Thanks for sharing!

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  7 лет назад +1

      Glad you enjoyed it! I have an old huge Opaque Projector I will make a video on...another mainstay from 60's school systems!

  • @jeenkzk5919
    @jeenkzk5919 11 лет назад +4

    I'm 36 and you just pulled something deep from my memory banks! I remember we would jack with the side knob throwing it out of sync. We would then freak out and either hopefully fix it or let it run out in fear of getting in trouble with the teacher.

  • @dannyfrankscomedy
    @dannyfrankscomedy 3 года назад +2

    Oh man, watched so many stores at the library on these. What a nostalgic rush I just got.

  • @frankgonzalezofficial3010
    @frankgonzalezofficial3010 2 года назад +1

    I remember the ones that would project into a screen. You would put a cassette in. Cassette player and it would also make a sound to let the teacher to change the screen.

  • @angelaloof852
    @angelaloof852 2 года назад +1

    Takes me back!!

  • @thevozz
    @thevozz 6 лет назад

    LOVE this!! I was born in 70..boy does this bring back memories. When the teacher came into class and told u she has a movie..it was the best!! Nap time..Lol. thnx for posting!!

  • @KentuckyRanger
    @KentuckyRanger 7 лет назад +1

    OMG! I remember these! We used to have library hour on Tuesday's in grade school. I really looked forward to them because I'd get a slide show and watch it on one of these.
    Ah, the 70s...

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  7 лет назад

      Yes....good old days and grand memories of a simpler time!

  • @epcotman32
    @epcotman32 3 года назад +1

    I remember that, we had those in school, loved them.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  3 года назад

      yes...this video has had lots and lots of views with many saying similar things!

  • @arcademania7544
    @arcademania7544 3 года назад

    This was a trip back to the late 70's. Now a day, kids follow along on their iPads. 😌

  • @chrisstory563
    @chrisstory563 3 года назад +1

    for some strange reason. I just been remembering those machine recently and boy, they were neat back in the day. the model I remember was the one where they had the cassette and film strip section would be on the right side of the machine instead of the bottom. they were pretty cool back then.

  • @kennethsanderson1172
    @kennethsanderson1172 3 года назад

    When I was in elementary school in the mid/late 70's we had these in our library. Man, technology sure has changed! Thanks for the trip down memory lane.

  • @mrbarr1961
    @mrbarr1961 6 лет назад

    great job show how it was like getting projects and film in school back then.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  6 лет назад

      Yes...many loved the memories this video brought back!

  • @TasickMedia
    @TasickMedia 8 лет назад

    I love the pace and production value in this old media. The projection technology and incandescent bulb add a lot of warmth to the presentation as well. I graduated in 1998 and remember lots of film strips, reels and slides during my primary education. I feel like I should buy one of these viewers, just to give my daughter the experience.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  8 лет назад

      Many people do have fond memories of these machines! What you said is PRECISELY why I bought this machine for MY daughters to experience!

    • @TasickMedia
      @TasickMedia 8 лет назад

      Thanks for producing these videos. Aside from being extremely informational as I build my own MAME cabinets, it's all a trip down memory lane. Your videos conjure up the sounds and smells of the bowling alleys, pizza joints and mall arcades from my childhood. I live in Hong Kong now, but I've got a sales trip through the US in August, I was thinking of paying you a visit as I pass through PA. Maybe I can bum a little T-molding off you while I'm there (or just buy it). Oddly, that stuff is impossible to find in Hong Kong.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  8 лет назад

      stop by for sure...I am about 30 minutes north of Philly.....Todd

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  7 лет назад

      We do sell it...50 cents a foot for any color but silver and gold

  • @mathewbailey6718
    @mathewbailey6718 4 года назад +2

    The automatic filmstrip projectors use an intermittent sprocket to advance the film from one frame to the next. The mechanism that turns the sprocket is the same mechanism used in for example the Simplex brand projectors used in theatres.

  • @theoryg
    @theoryg 8 лет назад +5

    I remember all this entirely. We are basically a century away from those times.

  • @DeeGeeDeFi
    @DeeGeeDeFi 6 лет назад +1

    It's amazing to read that this 'educational delivery system' (filmstrips) were still used through the 1990s! I remember filmstrips having accompanying audio narrative from early grade school (mid 70s) through 1983. It was a 'fun' day when we had a movie set up in our room in grade school, but it wasn't fun in high school, because we were expected to pay attention and take notes during the film. Ugh. And THEN when VHS became the default, remember the large television screens (tm) were installed on the TOP SHELF of a heavy rolling wheel steel rack? I think I saw a few of these carts topple over when whomever was pushing the cart would push a little too hard, and CRASH the television would smash into the ground.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  6 лет назад +1

      Yes...there were lots of those stories...when I was growing up, we started with movies projected ina darkened room on a large screen...and then the projector ended up in front of room sideways projecting on a mirror into a box...with a 30 inch screen...so much smaller and was done with lights on in room so teacher could keep an eye on the kids

  • @jensona.v518
    @jensona.v518 4 года назад

    Wow
    Wonderful work. Thank you very much for your detailed explanation.

  • @mikegoglia2978
    @mikegoglia2978 Год назад +1

    Thank you for the trip down memory lane

  • @staticr1055
    @staticr1055 7 лет назад +1

    I remember my kindergarten days in the 90s we called library day the school didn't have tv one but the one next to it. Thanks for the best nostalgia ever

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  7 лет назад

      Glad it brought back good memories!

    • @albear972
      @albear972 5 лет назад

      They lingered onto the 90's? WOW! At this point any school would have a big 25 inch color TV with at least a top loading VCR.

  • @1959blantz
    @1959blantz 4 года назад

    I realize this is an older video and don't know if you read comments on videos close to 7 years old. I just wanted to say that you have to be my long lost brother. Besides my love for Pinball and Arcade machines, owning a few since the mid 80s, I was also big into 16MM film collecting, Up until a few years ago I sold my entire collection. I don't want to say for how much as I'm still kicking myself for selling everything. The collection consisted of over 100 features, many TV shows, (from the 50s, 60s, and 70s) Many Cartoons, Educational Films and more. I also included 6 16MM projectors ( 3 Elmos, 2 Eikis, 1 B&H ) 2 Rewinder sets, an Editor, and a Scope Lens. Several Features were on Eastman stock with most still holding their color and with minimal Color loss. Whenever possible I would try to buy Features on Fuji stock. I've been showing movies on a permanent large screen in my backyard since the late 90s. I sold the Films to purchase a higher end Digital projector so the picture and sound would be better and a larger selection of titles. Everyone that comes to my shows tell me they miss the old school way of showing movies. I would include drive-in count down clocks and trailers. I hope to go back to 16MM someday.My love for Film goes back to the early 70s when I was a kid. I bought a few super 8MM B&W silent Films because they were cheaper than color. I didn't even own a projector at that time as I was intrigued by the look of a film reel, and the thought that it took 24 frames to equal 1 second of movement. Younger people will never get the excitement of holding a film reel and the smell of film and I'm not talking about the dreaded Vinegar syndrome smell.Another thing that makes me feel like you are my long lost brother is the fact we are close to the same age, and I had Heart bypass surgery shortly before you did. I apologize for this long comment but I love talking film to fellow film lovers.

  • @DrewPalmquist
    @DrewPalmquist Год назад

    i remember seeing a film in kindergarten, the 95-96 school year, and he strip from what I remember, one line was "don't look directly at the sun the sun is brighter than you think''

  • @tinicum54
    @tinicum54 3 года назад +1

    I repaired dozens of those in the 80's.

  • @beckigreen
    @beckigreen 9 лет назад +3

    I remember the Teacher would let us turn the to the next picture,when the beep on the record cued us.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  9 лет назад +1

      +Becki Green Yes...you had to be on the teacher's good side to have this privilege!

  • @jamesgabele4221
    @jamesgabele4221 2 года назад

    I remember these in the 1980s in elementary school. I remember the teacher kept on mixing up the tape and film. I think 50% of the time it was about the episode where three things receive the wrong birthday gift and the episode ended with the things singing "Happy birthday to us."

  • @pkdrenaissance
    @pkdrenaissance 4 года назад +1

    Thank you for this information. This was very interesting and brought back many memories for me. I was born in 1961 and I remember how much fun I had looking at film strips when I was in elementary school in Durham NC.

  • @jonnda
    @jonnda 6 лет назад

    When I was in elementary school in the early 90's, these were out in our library. The teacher did not operate these, we did during our designated library time. There were two or three out on a table with headphones, and a shelf full of film available film strips.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  6 лет назад +1

      Great memories!!

    • @jonnda
      @jonnda 6 лет назад

      TNT Amusements Inc Yeah, and the only filmstrip I distinctly remember today, was from Disney about the headless horseman.

  • @rwdplz1
    @rwdplz1 2 года назад

    9:17 I remember these, schools in Metro Detroit were STILL using them in the late 90's.

  • @DarkRaptor99
    @DarkRaptor99 9 лет назад +1

    I graduated in 99 and filmstrips were still used occasionally even while I was in High School. Wow, Dukane is still in business I didn't expect that :)

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  9 лет назад

      +DarkRaptor99 Yes...the end of an era!

  • @hankbizzo5
    @hankbizzo5 6 лет назад +1

    Remember this being the first TNT video I ever watched!!

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  6 лет назад +1

      Ahhhh...I got you hooked!

    • @hankbizzo5
      @hankbizzo5 6 лет назад

      You did!! Funny thing I rarely play games anymore and do not watch videos about games. Something about the nostalgia and presentation keeps me watching and enjoying.. I would love to get my hands on some of the classics and start a man cave..

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  6 лет назад +1

      Glad you are watching enthusiastically!

  • @DragonAgentProd1
    @DragonAgentProd1 7 лет назад

    I remember this. Use to watched these back in my school years.

  • @tomservo5007
    @tomservo5007 4 года назад +2

    had them at my library, first half of the 80s -- I would use them weekly. The only one I remember watching was War of the Worlds. Those used cassettes.

    • @MrMatteNWk
      @MrMatteNWk 2 года назад

      "...martians in Grovers Mills" *BEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEP*

  • @darktetsuya
    @darktetsuya 11 лет назад +2

    wow blast from the past, I remember those! (especially the 'focus' screen so you can calibrate the projector accordingly)
    Also I swear the 'stranger' in the winnie the pooh strip sounded just like Huckleberry Hound...

  • @akoww1000
    @akoww1000 5 лет назад

    in 3rd grade, My school's library had a table full of them. As a reward for good grades or whatever we got to go use them for 30mins during school hours. They had four shelves of movie strips to watch. I remember when they got in the star wars and Indian jones, big day lol

  • @iscander_s
    @iscander_s 6 лет назад

    I have seen a similar system, abandoned in our college's warehouse, that uses 35mm filmstrip projector, and have a reel-to-reel machine add-on that switch the slides by beeps on the second audio channel on the tape. And the add-on is not just connects to player outputs, add-on have their own head and has to be physically placed on the side of the player and the tape has to be fed from the reel through player's head, then through add-on's head, and after then on the other reel! It was the weirdest setup that I have ever seen, it looked like DIY, but it was not, because it still had own box and instructions manual.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  6 лет назад +1

      It's really neat stuff...and great Retro decorations for your home that can still function!

  • @Altoclarinets
    @Altoclarinets 3 года назад

    I started kindergarten in 1998 and spent a fair amount of time in elementary school watching Disney filmstrips on a player just like the big white one you demonstrated after the slide carousel. If it ain't broke, I guess!

  • @scorinth
    @scorinth 11 лет назад

    He talks like only the older generations will remember these, but I just turned 26 and I still got to experience the teacher setting up the projector and running the filmstrips when I was in first and second grade in the early 90s.
    I still remember that we used the second type of projector he shows here - I think it was the very same model.

  • @EvaFull
    @EvaFull 11 лет назад

    Really cool and different video on the old projectors from school. Can't wait to see what other treasures you find and post about.

  • @tntamusements
    @tntamusements  11 лет назад +5

    There are LOTS of them on EBay...and pretty cheap....both cassette and filmstrip! :-)

  • @Allhoney33
    @Allhoney33 8 лет назад

    Thank you for the memories! My....have things changed!

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  8 лет назад +1

      +Lizzie Beth Yes, they have!! I have some other old pieces of AV equipment I hope to make videos of later! Subscribe to our channel!

    • @Allhoney33
      @Allhoney33 8 лет назад

      TNT Amusements Inc I definitely subscribed. Thanks!

  • @pancudowny
    @pancudowny 2 года назад +1

    We didn't have the auto-advance viewer/projectors, so we had to do manually the moment we heard the tone.(A simple "TOOT!") Listening to said tapes--which I found 2nd-hand--without the filmstrip made for some confusing first-times experiences with some things... like hearing "Taking It To The Streets" by The Doobie Brothers. The frame-advance signal was so ironically timed, I thought it part of the music! XD

  • @Cullenjohnmichael
    @Cullenjohnmichael 8 лет назад

    I bought one of these film strips from a thrift store in Glasgow today and it was in a really old tin, also had a booklet which I assume was for the teacher to narrate to the class whilst she flicked through the slides. Each paragraph has the slide number next to it. I'm guessing this is predates 1970 then. it's called "342 The Magic Horse" and was distributed by the Hulton Press in Fleet Street, London. Really amazing.

  • @ThriftyAV
    @ThriftyAV 4 года назад

    That first filmstrip held it's color very well. All of mine have reddened like your Walt Disney Wonder Tales. I had issues with the auto advance on my Dukane viewer, but a cassette head and demag fixed this issue. Nice video!

  • @warhawk05
    @warhawk05 6 лет назад

    This is similar to a projector my mom brought home in the late 70s. She was enlisting in the military and the recruiter gave her a projector like this to look at job options. But I don't remember her having to load film or cassettes. Maybe we got a different model? It was around 1978/79.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  6 лет назад

      Hard to say...this was probably around the same era...but I am sure they made different machines and designs.

  • @DennisWoodyard-DragonflyEnt
    @DennisWoodyard-DragonflyEnt 8 лет назад

    This was fun to watch. I still have a Bell & Howell Filmosound 35 unit, unfortunately it doesn't work any more. Plus, I have several filmstrips I illustrated back in the 1970s posted on my youtube page.

  • @conductive13
    @conductive13 11 лет назад

    I have one of these somewhere but it is much smaller... Good memories. (My mum was a teacher)

  • @agentdarkness4628
    @agentdarkness4628 5 лет назад

    Thank you for the help.

  • @TommyThompson.81
    @TommyThompson.81 3 года назад

    Hi Todd seeing this video brought back so many memories from when I was a kid In elementary school we used these machines called system 80 and they looked similar to the one you have there white box with a screen and buttons on the front of the machine and Inside would be kinda like a film reel of math questions hope you & your family Is doing well god bless merry christmas & happy new year

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  3 года назад

      glad this video brought back good memories!

  • @AnErrorOccurred
    @AnErrorOccurred Год назад +1

    I wonder if there is any conceivable mechanism around, or one could be devised, where you can convert old film strips to PowerPoint.

  • @excalibur2k4
    @excalibur2k4 11 лет назад

    Wow! I had forgotten about these. Thanks for sharing.

  • @Musicradio77Network
    @Musicradio77Network 9 лет назад

    I also got this one at Goodwill today is an Argus 500 slide projector and it works perfectly for its age, but this projector that I've got was from the early to mid 1950's. It's in excellent shape, except the dust cover and leather was kinda beat up, and it's in better shape. I might order a slide tray, slide mounts and one of the films which came out of a filmstrip projector. All I can do is cut, but in a slide mount, put them in a tray, and it's good to go.

  • @stphinkle
    @stphinkle 9 лет назад

    I remember these. When I was in Elementary School they used these and some in middle school to a tad. In later years, these were graduallly phased out in favor of Hypercard, Hyperstudio, and Powerpoint.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  9 лет назад

      +Stephen Hinkle Yes....a dead technology except for folks that collect them!

  • @Tawny-b1c
    @Tawny-b1c 6 лет назад

    I had one at home. My sister and I would have our friends over, and have a sort of movie time! We were the big sht! :)

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  6 лет назад

      Yes...it was a neat thing to have in the 8-0's and 90's!

  • @TechProGabe
    @TechProGabe 11 лет назад

    I saw that exact projector at a thrift store and had no idea what it was!

  • @albear972
    @albear972 5 лет назад

    I remember that Dukane brand machine. But the one I used in the early 80's played 45 RPM records.

  • @davidkennerly
    @davidkennerly 5 месяцев назад

    Okay, so I remember this from about 1966 to 1968 in elementary school but I don't remember it having a record that needed to be synched with the filmstrip. However, it sounds like that was the only way it could have been back in the mid-60s but I don't remember a record. Granted, my memory from then is extremely hazy.

  • @aquilamines4720
    @aquilamines4720 6 лет назад

    I was still In elementary school back in the 80's when we still had filmstrips. and my favorite was Sesame Street and Disney

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  6 лет назад

      Glad it brought back those memories for you!

  • @henrys3629
    @henrys3629 6 лет назад

    I found a Disney cassette/filmstrip like you have at Goodwill today. Mine is about dinosaurs that I can't find on the internet. Also found a non-Disney Ten little Indians.

  • @marvndave
    @marvndave 4 года назад +4

    Holds it up to the light, "does that look better?" Camera guy: "yea." Zooms into the dark frames...😔

  • @DaoFAQ
    @DaoFAQ 2 года назад +1

    Anyone remember watching The Lollipop Dragon on these? :)

    • @jamesgabele4221
      @jamesgabele4221 2 года назад

      I always wondered how the episode about the bad haircut ended. My teacher turned it off after the prince started throwing a tantrum.

  • @tonymich
    @tonymich Год назад +1

    Who remembers the filmstrips with cassettes for movies mainly from the 60’s and early 70’s like Willy Wonka and Charlottes Web?

  • @RLDSTUDIO
    @RLDSTUDIO 3 года назад

    I remember the teacher showing us a slide projection illustrated version of the Odyssey with paired audio. I wish I could remember the publisher or any more details. Would love to find a copy.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  3 года назад

      Look on eBay...alot of that material is turning up there!

    • @RLDSTUDIO
      @RLDSTUDIO 3 года назад

      @@tntamusements Thanks I will!

  • @KingHenryVR4
    @KingHenryVR4 10 лет назад +1

    I remember playing around with one of those filmstrip projectors in highschool in the late 90's, I just recently picked up a 16mm projector that I got to try an find some film for to test it out

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  10 лет назад

      There are tons of 16mm films on ebay!! Take a look!!!

    • @KingHenryVR4
      @KingHenryVR4 10 лет назад

      yeah I've looked at those an the prices are kina high on some of that stuff

    • @KingHenryVR4
      @KingHenryVR4 10 лет назад

      ***** Sure anything to test out on the projector

    • @KingHenryVR4
      @KingHenryVR4 10 лет назад

      Okay, are they on reels or just rolled up on cores

    • @KingHenryVR4
      @KingHenryVR4 10 лет назад

      Ah okay, I need to check into getting some 16mm reels since the projector didnt come with any to spool the film on

  • @williamwilliam9993
    @williamwilliam9993 5 лет назад

    Many filmstrips film are on a 35mm filmstrips projector, there's also GE show n tell phonograph, and LA Belle Tutor 16/ Duo 16

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  5 лет назад

      Yes...many people have had great memories of these machines!

  • @BelieveYouCanInspire
    @BelieveYouCanInspire 7 лет назад

    I was just talking about this the other day. We had some books on tapes but they had slides also I remember Reading the The Time Machine in the library and had slides and tapes. Do you remember those at all? I wish i had those again god the days

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  7 лет назад

      Glad the video brought back good memories!

  • @OneTheBlue
    @OneTheBlue 9 месяцев назад

    Its time for avant-garde, cutting-edge, experimental film strips! Complete with the Xylophone note to signal when its time to flip the knob.

  • @Rlotpir1972
    @Rlotpir1972 2 года назад

    Some fillmstrips have a combination 16mm filmstrip with 8-track tape cartridge.

  • @aeropureinhakase855
    @aeropureinhakase855 4 года назад

    I still have old film strips around here so i am wondering if they still sell the film strip projectors nowadays

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  4 года назад +1

      I bought these machines on eBay for my daughters to play with and use...which they did. They gave shows to their friends! Then I sold them quite quickly back on eBay, so check there!

  • @james6231983
    @james6231983 6 лет назад

    I dont remember what this learning machine was called back in the 80's. You loaded this long film card into the projector. And also loaded a record into the machine and well. And you wear the headphones. The projection screen had 4 big buttons at the bottom the student would press to solve the multiple choice question. When you press the button it would make a loud clunk sound, and switch to the next slide. It was a fun machine to play and learn. Do anybody remember this machine???

  • @JunkerDC
    @JunkerDC 3 года назад

    I remember using this in school I never know it was 35mm I remember thinking how good the picture looked on these it was like HD back the way better the VHS

  • @beckigreen
    @beckigreen 9 лет назад

    I started school in 1979, and we had film strips.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  9 лет назад

      +Becki Green Yes...they went on through the mid 80's I think...

  • @georgef551
    @georgef551 10 лет назад +1

    I remember these from grade, all the way to high school, when VHS was everything. At that time, a lot of the filmstrips were faded.
    In grade school, we only had the front projection models, old ones with no tape player (separate tape player needed), and Ducane ones similar to the front projection one you have. We even had some older films with no audio, like you were showing. We even had spelling strips that came with a shutter, so the word flashes on the screen, and you had to repeat what the word was that flashed on the screen.
    I don't know if you remember "System 80", my grade school had one. You had a record, and a card with a 2-sided filmstrip glued in. It was an interactive machine with four buttons, which you select answers from. Got it right, advance a frame, got it wrong, it stays put, and the track on the record replays. You had to turn the card and record over to finish part 2 of each lesson. I had fun with that thing (late 70s, early 80s).
    Of course, we had the 16mm PJs as well. The school system even had "Escape to Witch Mountain" on reels. Not sure about other entertainment ones, almost all were educational.
    One teacher did have a smaller portable rear projection filmstrip projector than you had, not sure who made it, but it was neat, and was automatic.
    Worst part of the VHS craze, was junior high, a 4-story building with no elevator, and the equipment was stored on the top level. Glad I never had to bring one of those carts down or up any stairs, as they were the tall shelves, to make it that much harder.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  10 лет назад

      georgef551 Yes!! I remember those spelling projectors...but only after you reminded me!!

    • @georgef551
      @georgef551 10 лет назад

      TNT Amusements Inc
      Do you remember "System 80" as well? I can't find any images of one, it just shows a computer, or projectors casting 80-inch images. No images or videos. Must be ultra-rare, or there's none left.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  9 лет назад

      georgef551 I do not remember those machines at all...perhaps our school system didn;t buy them.

    • @georgef551
      @georgef551 9 лет назад

      TNT Amusements Inc
      They must be extinct, or there's one or two really well hidden. Those were fun.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  9 лет назад +1

      georgef551 If I ever find one, will make a video of it!

  • @Dell2YT
    @Dell2YT 6 лет назад

    Were there any other built-in screen models made like this? i distinctly remember a fan motor noise when ours played in the classroom but i could be mistaken. thank you for posting this by the way. I've been trying to find out what that projection-screen machine was. I have foggy memories of playing with one of these on the floor in kindergarten. (we were very careful with it). i don't remember ever seeing the filmstrips for it, but it's very possible that the teacher kept them behind her desk and re-wound it for us when we weren't looking.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  6 лет назад +1

      There were other similar machines by different manufacturers for sure...but I havent run across any others. I got these years ago for my daughters to play with and run the strips themselves to get them hands on older equipment.

  • @Extrema22
    @Extrema22 11 лет назад

    Very unexpected and very awesome video!

  • @cloudcaylen
    @cloudcaylen 4 года назад

    This is amazing!

  • @KingHenryVR4
    @KingHenryVR4 10 лет назад +1

    I got a package with between 70-90?? 35mm films with cassettes an some other stuff coming in maybe this week, now I just have to decide which style of those projectors I wanna go with to view them :)

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  9 лет назад

      KingHenryVR4 Neat!! I just saw your comment now---a year later so I am curious...how were the filmstrips?

    • @KingHenryVR4
      @KingHenryVR4 9 лет назад

      They were pretty much all old educational film strips from some school in CA, the same person also had some more older stuff she said came with a bunch of LP's etc.. but I didnt get back up with her to get those

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  9 лет назад

      KingHenryVR4 Glad you picked them up! It is a really neat Retro trip back into time!

    • @KingHenryVR4
      @KingHenryVR4 9 лет назад

      TNT Amusements Inc Yeah I know, stuff from back when my parents were still in school an probably you also :)

  • @cjones3710
    @cjones3710 Год назад

    We had these watched them often in 1992 3rd grade often. But children would turn the handle to.advance the slide, thescreen projector we had, but not auto.adavnce.ours were green and looked.metal. A catholic school we were.

  • @troydog
    @troydog 10 лет назад

    The auto turn was used in the 50s and maybe before then. They also made the same projector as the one you have with the tape unit on the back but it had a turntable 4 speed. And the record had the tone for auto turn built in. It had a tube amp and was not a bad unit in fact it was made like a tank. Also they had some projectors with patch cable to turntable for the auto turn.
    Some had remotes like a slide projector also. God I have used many and many of them.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  10 лет назад

      Thanks for these extra notes! People will remember when they read them!!!

  • @bt8406
    @bt8406 5 лет назад

    Thank you for this. My daughter was watching the mouse and the motorcyle, and i remembered watching it first on a filmstrip at monte vista, west covina, ca, about 1975/6. This is great, there isnt many videos of this. I would really like to see the experience of playing through one. can you take a video aim the camera and frame it 99% on the media and leave some kidn of overhand that shows us its a projector, and click through a whole story, or is that copyright issue? I think it would be great if i can show my girls that.
    Thanks again!!

  • @Paulywint
    @Paulywint 11 лет назад

    The Library, had a projector like this one.I actually had a manual filmstrip projector made by Apollo, and I would rent them from the library, and entertain my niece when she was little with the stories such as THe Little Red Hen, and The Man Who Didn't Wash his dishes. The only thing I did not like about the projector was the light bulbs were expensive and they burnt out quickly.

  • @biged3561
    @biged3561 4 года назад

    I remember the dukane machine we had those in my elementary school

  • @agentdarkness4628
    @agentdarkness4628 6 лет назад

    I love this, this is very interesting. When I was in school back in the 80s I remember the film strips too, especially the educational child safety film strips. The film strips that stood out where things like stranger danger, and fire safety, and so on. I have a need hobby, I preserve vintage audio media. I am totally blind, if I could I would preserve the visual stuff too. Where can I find those educational Disney film strips with cassettes? I would like to find the complete series of Winnie the Pooh on the way to school, I have equipment to put cassettes and vinyl records onto CD, if I ever find them I will convert the cassette part of it onto a CD, and keep the filmstrip and preserve the whole thing, is there a place online that has stuff like this that I can order from??se

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  6 лет назад

      There may be a facebook group or even a google group...I never really looked into it. Perhaps you could do some research!

  • @mark_omega
    @mark_omega Год назад

    Todd Rodgwrs!!!!! Huge fan from canada king of king

  • @deusmachina8712
    @deusmachina8712 2 года назад

    I was born in 95 and my local library had one of these - is this made by Dukane? What model is it?

  • @carloscardona6587
    @carloscardona6587 3 года назад

    didn’t see much a these back in school, maybe a microfiche reader in my college library, but never this kind of projector

  • @educationalchanneltaniyada4327
    @educationalchanneltaniyada4327 4 года назад

    hello sir,
    thank u to show the programming of filmstrip. i am a teacher and recently i will provide the lesson on filmstrip. can i share your video link to my students on my you-tube channel? if they watch the methods they all are very helpful from you.

  • @Averythefanman
    @Averythefanman 11 лет назад

    I need to find some filmstrips for my A-V Matic. The Stanly County Public Library still has one of these that is still in use today! There is a red book that has at least fifty different titles in it. Whenever we go, I always ask for a filmstrip and cassette, and my brother and I will watch a filmstrip and go back to Kindergarten. I need to eventually restore mine, because the cassette player makes a clicking noise like there is a flat spot on the idler, and it needs a new belt.

  • @beckigreen
    @beckigreen 9 лет назад

    I remember the worst,and scariest film strip I saw was about the Bell Witch. It's was so disturbing, that I'm 42 years old and still remember it.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  9 лет назад +1

      +Becki Green WOW...I wonder what it was about!

    • @kekort2
      @kekort2 9 лет назад +1

      +Becki Green YES!! Me, too. Every Halloween the teacher would drag that filmstrip out and scare the heck out of us!

    • @beckigreen
      @beckigreen 9 лет назад

      kekort2, Thank Goodness someone else remembers this! It was pretty graphic for little kids to see. I remember the filmstrip story was about the family that was harassed by the Bell Witch. So whatever the Witch had done to that family member, that is what would be shown happening in the filmstrip.

  • @AlexandreCortinas.
    @AlexandreCortinas. 7 месяцев назад

    Amazing machine!!!

  • @The_Conspiracy_Analyst
    @The_Conspiracy_Analyst 10 месяцев назад

    bonus points if you remember the teacher picking one student to press the button when the cue beeped

  • @fernandosalas8589
    @fernandosalas8589 5 лет назад

    The only time I saw a movie in school was in JHS 217, never in grammar school wish I went to your school.

    • @tntamusements
      @tntamusements  5 лет назад

      I head someone else tell me this too...

  • @EvertvanIngen
    @EvertvanIngen 8 лет назад

    What a awesome Machine!

  • @bartley3742
    @bartley3742 Год назад

    Been trying to track down an old 70s version of a Wrinkle in Time film strip. Anyone know where I could run across this?

  • @Vichardhara303
    @Vichardhara303 8 лет назад +1

    Thanks a lot ..I am Also projector Lover ..

  • @DavidCGant
    @DavidCGant 11 лет назад

    The last time I saw one of these was in 1995 back in elementary school. After that, it seemed like VHS had caught on. I preferred these.

  • @mdegast
    @mdegast 11 лет назад

    I can only remember teachers using Betamax (I think, tapes were smaller in width than VHS, it's long ago, I'm 34 now, about 8 or 9 back then) and VHS-tapes. Sometimes dia-projectors. Later, in early 90's, cassettes for listening exercises and exams for foreign languages, English, French and German. And for Dutch of course.