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The Slide Cube Projector is a
slide projector A slide projector is an opto-mechanical device for showing photographic slides. 35 mm slide projectors, direct descendants of the larger-format magic lantern, first came into widespread use during the 1950s as a form of occasional home ...
and system, manufactured and marketed by
Bell & Howell Bell and Howell LLC is a U.S.-based services organization and former manufacturer of cameras, lenses, and motion picture machinery, founded in 1907 by two projectionists, and originally headquartered in Wheeling, Illinois. The company is now ...
. Introduced in 1970 and marketed through the 1980s, the projector derived its name from its plastic slide storage cube-shaped
magazine A magazine is a periodical publication, generally published on a regular schedule (often weekly or monthly), containing a variety of content. They are generally financed by advertising, purchase price, prepaid subscriptions, or by a combinatio ...
, about 5.5 cm in each dimension (a bit larger than a slide), and held 36–44 slides, depending on the mount thickness. Each cube had an operable sliding lid to hold the slides in the cube. The system consisted of Slide Cubes and a special projector to receive the cubes. Bell and Howell subsequently introduced a Slide Cube Projector II, with revised features. Unlike trays used in straight-tray slide projector or
carousel slide projector A carousel slide projector is a slide projector that uses a rotary tray to store slides, used to project slide photographs and to create slideshows. It was first patented on May 11, 1965, by David E. Hansen of Fairport, New York. Hansen was an i ...
s, the slides in a Slide Cube are not stored in separate slots, rather they are stacked together, one on top of the other. After a cube is manually set into the PRE-LOAD position and then manually slid into the LOAD position, the action causes the cube's lid to open. The advance trigger is activated, a sequence is initiated when the slide is advanced into the LOAD position. The advance mechanism allows one slide to drop from the loaded cube into a slide-size hole in a circular turntable to rotate through the next four positions. The turntable is thinner than one slide and is designed to allow one slide to drop and move forward to a PREVIEW position, PROJECTION position, and RETURN position, the latter from which it can be returned to allow for a single slide's worth of backup, and then finally to a reload position, where it drops into a stack that is then manually elevated up into an empty cube. The projector itself used a 300 watt quartz bulb, and could optionally be operated by a tethered remote control. The projector featured an integrated handle, plastic lid or optional lid which incorporated additional cubestorage. An adjustable foot allowed aim the projector vertically. Bell and Howell Slide Cube Projectors were less expensive than trays and allowed for higher storage capacity, where a book or drawer of 16 forty-slide cubes (640 slides) occupied the space of a single round tray holding at most 140 slides — roughly eight times as many slides in the same space — and theoretically one eighth the cost. Two features, stack storage and preview, made for easier editing of slide shows; slides can be added to or removed from the show without having to shift all of the remaining slides up or down in their slots one at a time. Some tray-based projectors (e.g. some Kodak round-tray and Hähnel straight-tray slide projectors) can use stack loaders to view a stack of slides, but they don't lend themselves to this type of operation and there is no associated storage system. The slide cube had drawbacks, including the inability to reverse to more than one slide, the fragility of the cubes, and the advancing plate's tendency to jam — interrupting slide shows and making the projectors challenging to operate. Though ''Slide Cube Projectors'' are no longer manufactured, cubes, bulbs and a few replacement parts as well as used projectors and cubes remain available on the second hand market.


See also

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Franke & Heidecke Rolleiscop Rollei () was a German manufacturer of optical instruments founded in 1920 by and in Braunschweig, Lower Saxony, and maker of the Rolleiflex and Rolleicord series of cameras. Later products included specialty and nostalgic type films for the ...
{{DEFAULTSORT:Slide Cube Projector Slide projectors