Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The intermittent movements required a great deal of effort and my strength diminished with each turn.
It is used for giving intermittent movements.
Males mount over the females and are often seen floating on the surface with the intermittent movement of flippers.
It is also pointed out that 3-perf will result in a quieter camera than 4-perf as there is less intermittent movement per frame.
In movie theater projectors, the intermittent movement is often produced by a Maltese cross mechanism.
Because there is no intermittent movement, the image is created through a rotating prism which scans the frames.
On February 21, 1893, a patent was issued for the system that governed the intermittent movement of film in the Kinetograph.
The intermittent movement in these projectors is usually provided by a Geneva drive, also known as the Maltese Cross mechanism.
Because BH perfs have sharp corners, the repeated use of the film through intermittent movement projectors creates strain that can easily tear the perforations.
Ozbourn returned to Long Beach 6 September 1968 and remained there, with intermittent movements to Portland and San Diego, for the next year.
At any rate, as the dusk came on a slow, intermittent movement upon the sand pits began, a movement that seemed to gather force as the stillness of the evening about the cylinder remained unbroken.
The intermittent mechanism or intermittent movement is the device by which film is regularly advanced and then held in place for a brief duration of time in a movie camera or movie projector.
A tic can be defined as a repeated, individually recognizable, intermittent movement or movement fragments that are almost always briefly suppressible and are usually associated with awareness of an urge to perform the movement.
Woodville Latham and his sons develop the Latham Loop - the concept of loose loops of film on either side of the intermittent movement to prevent stress from the jerky movement.
To avoid infringement on Edison's motion picture patents, the Mutograph camera used continuous movement friction rollers to move 68 mm film into the camera, instead of intermittent movement by sprockets as Edison's 35 mm camera did.
In the earliest experiments attempts were made to secure the photographs, reduced microscopically, arranged spirally on a cylinder about the size of a phonograph record, and coated with a highly sensitized surface, the cylinder being given an intermittent movement, so as to be at rest during each exposure.
It was instrumental in the history of film in that it created what became known as the "Latham loop", which are two loops of film, one on each side of the intermittent movement, which act as a buffer between continuously moving sprockets and the jerky motion of the intermittent movement.