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#1
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It's available from Cumulus Soaring. That's where I got my copy. I also picked up Dawn Flight at the Little Rock Convention from them.
Mark |
#2
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On Thursday, April 23, 2020 at 3:55:18 PM UTC-6, wrote:
It's available from Cumulus Soaring. That's where I got my copy. I also picked up Dawn Flight at the Little Rock Convention from them. Mark Is this the movie? Free on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OqHXiaMhSIo |
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Yes it is
Do you know if quality of DVD is better than the one of YouTube ? |
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On Fri, 24 Apr 2020 02:12:14 -0700, befut8 wrote:
Yes it is Do you know if quality of DVD is better than the one of YouTube ? Seems likely, at least right now, because I've heard that YouTube is using reduced bandwidth during the COVID lock-down to avoid network congestion, and of course this reduces image sharpness. In any case this film looks as if it was made for TV, back in the day when the NTSC standard was a thing, with only 525 scan lines, which may mean that the master copy's resolution was quite low. Would it have been shot on video tape or film? I watched it last night, found it was unwatchable in full-screen mode on my laptop (1600 x 900 screen), so watched it as the small image. Nice movie. All I could fault was the rapid weather switches during the Gold flight and the rather unlikely auto-tow behind the old-timer's jalopy: the rope looked a bit short! Bit of a navigational overshoot though - Google Earth says he went 30 miles too far - and, from driving 395 to Lee Vining from Bishop I seem to remember some fairly fairly unlandable country along the way. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
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On 4/24/20 5:38 AM, Martin Gregorie wrote:
On Fri, 24 Apr 2020 02:12:14 -0700, befut8 wrote: Yes it is Do you know if quality of DVD is better than the one of YouTube ? Seems likely, at least right now, because I've heard that YouTube is using reduced bandwidth during the COVID lock-down to avoid network congestion, and of course this reduces image sharpness. In any case this film looks as if it was made for TV, back in the day when the NTSC standard was a thing, with only 525 scan lines, which may mean that the master copy's resolution was quite low. Would it have been shot on video tape or film? I watched it last night, found it was unwatchable in full-screen mode on my laptop (1600 x 900 screen), so watched it as the small image. Nice movie. All I could fault was the rapid weather switches during the Gold flight and the rather unlikely auto-tow behind the old-timer's jalopy: the rope looked a bit short! Bit of a navigational overshoot though - Google Earth says he went 30 miles too far - and, from driving 395 to Lee Vining from Bishop I seem to remember some fairly fairly unlandable country along the way. The YouTube version is only 240P, so the DVD would almost certainly be better. |
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On Friday, April 24, 2020 at 7:43:54 AM UTC-4, kinsell wrote:
On 4/24/20 5:38 AM, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Fri, 24 Apr 2020 02:12:14 -0700, befut8 wrote: Yes it is Do you know if quality of DVD is better than the one of YouTube ? Seems likely, at least right now, because I've heard that YouTube is using reduced bandwidth during the COVID lock-down to avoid network congestion, and of course this reduces image sharpness. In any case this film looks as if it was made for TV, back in the day when the NTSC standard was a thing, with only 525 scan lines, which may mean that the master copy's resolution was quite low. Would it have been shot on video tape or film? I watched it last night, found it was unwatchable in full-screen mode on my laptop (1600 x 900 screen), so watched it as the small image. Nice movie. All I could fault was the rapid weather switches during the Gold flight and the rather unlikely auto-tow behind the old-timer's jalopy: the rope looked a bit short! Bit of a navigational overshoot though - Google Earth says he went 30 miles too far - and, from driving 395 to Lee Vining from Bishop I seem to remember some fairly fairly unlandable country along the way. The YouTube version is only 240P, so the DVD would almost certainly be better. Youtube adjusts the resolution automatically to fit your bandwidth (not just your last-mile bandwidth, but the congestion all along the way from YT's servers to you). I've just now tried this one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OqHXiaMhSIo and it auto-plays for me at 240p. But I can download it (however slowly) for later off-line playing (using an add-on to Firefox), supposedly at 360p - the saved file is actually 384x288, about 123 megabytes. (This add-on, Youtube Downloader Lite, also offers higher resolutions for the download, but they are color-coded in the listing, which seems to mean they are sent to some server for reprocessing, which is very slow if it works at all, so I use the gray one at the top of the list.) But yeah the video tech in the 60's wasn't what we're used to now. Cheap phones and drones now give you "HD" resolution (excessive IMO). A couple of years ago I bought the DVD version of The Sunship Game (from the 1969 (?) nats) and was rather disappointed with the video quality. To my taste, true DVD ("SD") resolution is about right. Unless you sit too close to your large TV. |
#7
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Ahhhh...Dawn Flight.
This is without a doubt the best flying of two gliders chasing each other that I have ever seen. The flight low across the lake and then between the trees is something to behold. Incredible. For a taste see this *UBER* bad version of just the chase sequences. https://youtu.be/A0ptkl_0-xc. |
#8
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I bought the 'Directors Cut' (my term) of Dawn Flight at the SSA Convention in Little Rock. It also contains a section where the director and Dennis Ahrndt discuss the movie and how some of the flying sequences were done.
The DVDs of both DF and BWFWTC are acceptable, considering the older formats and film to DVD conversion. In Sunship Game, one of my favorite scenes is where George Moffat is taking a hand saw to the wings of his Cirrus. Mark |
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