LTC8K6
Penultimate Amazing
Good Lord!
Look at the size of that ankle in relation to the foot!
This isn't bigfoot, it's a bipedal elephant!
Elephants don't sink as far into the soil, though...
Good Lord!
Look at the size of that ankle in relation to the foot!
This isn't bigfoot, it's a bipedal elephant!


The mobilgrip is just a handle. It doesn't look like you can keep it on the camera and keep the camera in it's case. If Roger used the mobilgrip, he must have just had the camera stuck in a saddlebag, which is not good for keeping your settings from changing.
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/7934701409b2ce91.jpg[/qimg]
Okay, this mobilgrip isn't just a handle and can apparently trigger a camera. I can't see where it could attach to the K-100, though. We can see good pics of one, and I don't see a place where it would screw in.
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/7934701444186e80.jpg[/qimg]
Robert Rouveroy writes :
>We used 16mm GSAP (General Service Aerial Photography?) >camera's with modified lens mounts. They are rather small, have 50 >feet cassettes, good for about 90 seconds.
In my feckless youth I used GSAPs (modified with C-mounts) as cockpit cameras in competition gliders, where space is at a premium. When they worked, they worked. And when they lost their loops (which happened more often than not) we got "special effects." Ugh.
My preference, whenever possible, was to use spring-powered Kodak K-100 cameras instead. The non-turret (single-lens) models were very compact, weighed little more than GSAPs, ran 40 feet on a winding, and never gave us a lick of trouble. They were about the same height and width as GSAPs but twice as long from stem to stern. They took 100-ft rolls. The main downside was that you couldn't remote-control them without a jury-rigged cable release.
The K100 was a sort of streamlined, "prosumer" spinoff of a pro 16mm camera called the Cine Special, to which Bolex motors could be easily adapted, and which used 100-ft and 200-ft quick-change magazines. The K100 couldn't be externally motorized off the shelf, but with some modification it probably could be. I have no idea whether it would be possible to modify a K-100 for Super-16 -- I suspect it wouldn't be very hard.
You can see some excellent pictures of a turret model K100 at:
http://www.cinevision-ny.com/salesinfo/K100z/K100z.html
The single-lens model was rare, even in its day, and I've never been able to find one via Google.
Dan Drasin
Producer/DP
Marin County, CA
Dan Drasin wrote:
>My preference, whenever possible, was to use spring-powered Kodak >K-100 cameras instead
Great camera, and pretty quiet for an MOS camera, too.
Jeff Kreines
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/thum_19705470152c87f8e0.jpg[/qimg]
This is what I think is going on with the mid-tarsal break. Unless it is something else.
Now how did he grow over a foot tall, muscles, add 300 lbs, and find a suit with a butt crack and two tits, with hair consistent with a paranormal person of that shape.
The P-G Bigfoot has a weave that is consistent with the body shape.