Depending on the size of the reel it held anywhere from 50 feet (3 inch reel) to 400 feet (7 inch reel) of film. Sometimes an additional 50 feet to 100 feet could be squeezed onto a reel, but this was risky.
The cassettes for Super 8 cameras have 50 feet each. After development several could be spliced for use on a larger reel in the projector.
$1.99 plus shipping, they sell on eBay all the time.
28 Bucks http://www.agassiztrading.com/cameras-film/cameras/cameras-8mm/8mm-dejur-electra.htm
by scanning of recording the film on a camcorder and digitalizing the tape
Load the film and press run
Yes it is. Check the phone book for your area under 'video productions' or 'video editing.' That should lead you to someone to help. Also check out online 8mm film transfer services. StashSpace.Com is a good one and has a calculator you can use to see how much the film transfer would cost.
Measure the width of the film, if it equals 8mm then you have an 8mm tape.
In the early 1990s, Kodak stopped making 8mm film for the private market altogether. This made the use of 8mm film, which could only be bought from independent film stores, nearly obsolete.
The software asperasoft will convert 8mm film to DVD. There are several other software applications that also convert 8mm film to DVD including globalsafe and video2dvd.
A hexagon has 6 sides of equal length. The perimeter of a hexagon with a side length of 8mm = 6 x 8mm = 48mm.
Unfortunately, there are no adapters that will allow you to watch an 8MM tape on a VHS player. What you will need to look for is a camcorder that plays 8MM tapes; from there, you can easily hook up the camcorder to the television.
no, its allways acetate film, not nitrate
try pro8mm.com
cassette
to a fan or a collector of 8mm film maybe $15
super8 works on super8 and 8mm on 8mm projectors, some projectors do have a switch to go from one to another
$1.99 plus shipping, they sell on eBay all the time.
eBay or garage sale