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THREE BOXES AND LOOSE MOSTLY VINTAGE CAMERAS to include a portable Marconi phone, two tablet keypads, an Aicomatic MR-101, a Kodak EK160-EF, a boxed Fujifilm FinePix HS30 EXR, a Miranda 75-300mm 1:4.5-5.6 lens, a Helios -44m 2/58 lens, an Envoy Auro Tele Converter 2X for OM-1 lens, an Olympus OM-1 camera, a boxed Jessops TP327 tripod, a tripod stool, a Boots Colormaster projector, etc (3 boxes and loose) (s.d)
Kodak Carousel Slide Projector, together with a Phillips cassette recorder, a Braunschweig projection system, also including a boxed speaker and a pair of mobile phones. (1 box and loose items)Buyer Note: WARNING! This lot contains untested or unsafe electrical items. It is supplied for scrap or reconditioning only. TRADE ONLY
Three boxes of sundry china and glassware, a box containing assorted glass and metal wares to include bobbins, souvenir spoons, etc., a box containing assorted vintage projector/photography equipment and a vintage Morphy Richards hairdryer and a Singer sewing machine, a vintage cased projector and a vintage tiered sewing / craft box (5 boxes plus)
A FINE SOLAR MICROSCOPE COMPENDIUM BY EDWARD NAIRNE, LONDON, CIRCA 1770signed on the mirror plate NAIRNE LONDON, adjusting screws and threaded tube, contained within fitted box with two further lenses and plush-lined shagreen case containing screw-barrel microscope projector with accessories and multi-sample slides -- 10in. (25.5cm.) wide; together with a rare copy of Nairne's English-French description of solar and pocket microscopes, and accompanying engraving of a Nairne solar microscope(3)
Collection of vintage London Bus and transport memorabilia to include telephone, money boxes, wall plaques, die cast miniature, coal and brass models, teapot, mug and Projector lamp together with a large quantity of badges and pins to include bus and poppy commemorative remembrance examples etc
Wehrmachts-Wanderkino, um 1940Eugen Bauer, Stuttgart. Transportabler Projektor für 35mm-Kinofilme in Feuerschutztrommeln auf Spulen bis 900 m Filmlänge. Objektiv: Isco Göttingen 1:2/90 mm. Massives Filmschaltwerk einer Bauer-Kinotheater-Maschine mit separater Lichttonabtastung. Zur Wärmedämmung ist zwischen Lampenhaus und Filmbahn eine mit Wasser gefüllte Cuvette angebracht, um das Risiko eines Brandes des damals ausschließlich verwendeten Nitrozellulosefilms zu mindern (Typenklasse B). Im mit Kunstleder bezogenen Holzgehäuse sorgt ein Elektromotor für den Antrieb. Der Projektor soll mit der vorhandenen Steckkurbel zur Filmschonung angeworfen werden. In der Originalausführung gehörte zu diesem Wanderkino ein 20 Kilo schwerer Transformator. Um diesen zu ersetzen, wurde der bis vor wenigen Jahren noch in Betrieb befindliche Projektor auf 220-Volt/1000-Watt-Halogenlampen umgerüstet. 1938 auf der Leipziger Herbstmesse vorgestellt, wurden bis 1945 nahezu 1800 dieser Projektoren an die Wehrmacht für ihre Truppenkinos geliefert. In den Nachkriegsjahren wurden mit "Sonoluxen" von Wanderkino-Unternehmern häufig entfernte Dörfer mit den neuesten Filmen bespielt. Nach 1948 soll Bauer kurzzeitig noch einige "Sonolux II"-Geräte produziert haben. Das Gerät ist grundsätzlich funktionsfähig. In den Feuerschutztrommeln befindet sich je eine 600m-Bauer-Spule. Elektrik nicht überprüft. Start Price: EUR 400 Zustand: (3-/3+)Wehrmacht Traveling Cinema, c. 1940Eugen Bauer, Stuttgart. Portable projector for 35mm cinema films in fireproof drums on reels of up to 900 m long, with Isco Göttingen 1:2/90 mm lens, electric motor in imitation leather-covered case, sturdy film transport from a Bauer cinema projector with separate optical sound scanning and water-filled cuvette between the lamp housing and the film track to reduce the risk of fire from nitrocellulose film (Class B) of the period, basic working condition, with 600-meter Bauer reel in each protection drum. – Note: The projector is started via the existing plug-in crank to protect the film. In the original version, this traveling cinema came with a 20 kg transformer. To replace this, the projector, which was still in use until a few years ago, was converted to 220-volt/1,000-watt halogen lamps. Unveiled at the Leipzig Autumn Fair in 1938, by 1945 almost 1800 of these projectors had been delivered to the Wehrmacht for its troop cinemas. In the post-war years, traveling cinema operators often used "Sonoluxes" to show the latest films in remote villages. After 1948, Bauer is said to have briefly produced a few "Sonolux II" devices. Start Price: EUR 400 Condition: (3-/3+)
British WW1 Livens Projector together with an exploded cylinder and two base plates, the projector H96 x 22cm diameter. The projector had a range of between 1,000 and 1,450 yards, and was usually used in battery formation, easily simultaneously fired by means of an electric ignition, it fired two types of ammunition, gas shell and smoke shell
HISENSE SMART MINI PROJECTOR - C1TUK (4K UHD 65" - 300" ADJUSTABLE PROJECTION) / RRP: £1,300 - £1,900 / MINIMAL SIGNS OF USE / POWERS UP & CONNECTS TO WI-FI (SEE IMAGES) / MINOR SCRATCH ON CORNER (SEE IMAGES) / LANGUAGE WILL NEED TO BE CHANGED IN SETTINGS MENU / WITH BOX, CABLES AND REMOTE (COLLECTION LOCATION: GUILDFORD) / A7

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14524 item(s)/page