Tue May 10, 2011 12:41 pm
The simple non-detailed answer is: The filmstrip projector is DESIGNED to show non-moving film, so of course it's not going to melt the film.
As already mentioned, this is accomplished by heat filter glass and lower wattage lamp.
If you used these on a motion picture projector, the image would be too dark. The shutter is a big reason. I'm not so sure about the aperture making a big difference (I think a filmstrip frame is identical to a full-frame, i.e., silent-era motion picture frame).
As for safety film versus nitrate: There is no 16mm nitrate film, and that is the gauge that was used most in schools. Even when schools used 35mm film (like before 16mm was introduced in 1923), it was mostly safety film.
All filmstrips would have been safety base, I have to imagine, but this is just my common-sense guess.
Last edited by
Jay Schwartz on Tue Dec 27, 2011 1:06 am, edited 1 time in total.