Academy Award Nominations & Winners by Category: Scientific and Technical Award. Listed below are the Academy Award nominations and winners in the category of Scientific and Technical Award. The symbol appears next to the winner for each year. Click on the name of a company or person in the list to display more information about that company or person. Or, click on a category in the column on the right to display the nominees and winners in that category.(Class I)To Du.
BTW the film part of the program will be shown on a Kinoton PK-60-E. AFAIK this will be the first time. the PK 60 E, is a refinement of the FP 30 EC. Mat. Acoplamento motor/proj | completo com usinagem - cen08326003708: acumulador de filmes simples para interlock - kinoton : 1060: adaptador de surround. -MS-15A MP3- Enceinte professionnelle amplifiée Professional active speaker MODE D EMPLOI USER MANUAL 1. Kinoton FP-30 ES, Dolby. 15,6" Led Mat - 1366x768.
Pont Manufacturing Corp. Eastman Kodak Company for super- sensitive panchromatic film.(Class II)To Fox Film Corp. Class III)To Electrical Research Products, Inc., for moving coil microphone transmitters. To RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. To RCA- Photophone, Inc. NOTE: The Scientific and Technical Awards (Class I, II and III) were new categories in 1. Class II)To Technicolor Motion Picture Corp.
G. rodenstock pr50 manuelles refraktometer pr-50 manual refractometer 80020. kinoton film projektor fp 30 d + schreiber xd75 gleichrichter filmprojektor kino. Full text of "Reference catalogue of the Reynolds Library, Rochester, N.Y" See other formats. The film was shown on a Kinoton 35/70 projector with a hand-picked. approximately 30-40 times and was. to doing a manual "count-down" to.
Class III)To Eastman Kodak Company for its Type II- B Sensitometer.(Class II)To Electrical Research Products, Inc. To RCA- Victor Company, Inc. Class III)To Fox Film Corporation, Fred Jackman and Warner Bros.
Pictures, Inc., and Sidney Sanders of RKO Studios, Inc. Class II)To Electrical Research Products, Inc. Vertical Cut Disc Method of recording sound for motion pictures (hill and dale recording).(Class III)To Columbia Pictures Corporation for their application of the Vertical Cut Disc method (hill and dale recording) to actual studio production, with their recording of the sound on the picture, One Night of Love. To Bell and Howell Company for their development of the Bell and Howell Fully Automatic Sound and Picture Printer.(Class II)To Agfa Ansco Corporation for their development of the Agfa infra- red film. To Eastman Kodak Company for their development of the Eastman Pola- Screen.(Class III)To Metro- Goldwyn- Mayer Studio for the development of anti- directional negative and positive development by means of jet turbulation, and the application of the method to all negative and print processing of the entire product of a major producing company. To William A. Mueller of Warner Bros.- First National Studio Sound Department for his method of dubbing, in which the level of the dialog automatically controls the level of the accompanying music and sound effects.
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To Mole- Richardson Company for their development of the “Solar- spot” spot lamps. To Douglas Shearer and Metro- Goldwyn- Mayer Studio Sound Department for their automatic control system for cameras and sound recording machines and auxiliary stage equipment. To Electrical Research Products, Inc. To Paramount Productions, Inc. Paramount transparency air turbine developing machine.
To Nathan Levinson, Director of Sound Recording for Warner Bros.- First National Studio, for the method of intercutting variable density and variable area sound tracks to secure an increase in the effective volume range of sound recorded for motion pictures.(Class I)To Douglas Shearer and the Metro- Goldwyn- Mayer Studio Sound Department for the development of a practical two- way horn system and a biased Class A push- pull recording system.(Class II)To E. C. Wente and Bell Telephone Laboratories for their multi- cellular high- frequency horn and receiver. To RCA Manufacturing Co., Inc., for their rotary stabilizer sound head.(Class III)To RCA Manufacturing Co., Inc., for their development of a method of recording and printing sound records utilizing a restricted spectrum (known as ultra- violet light recording). RCA Manufacturing Co., Inc. Scientific or Technical (Class III) category.]To Electrical Research Products, Inc.
ERPI “Type Q” portable recording channel. To RCA Manufacturing Co., Inc., for furnishing a practical design and specifications for a non- slip printer. To United Artists Studio Corp. Class I)To Agfa Ansco Corporation for Agfa Supreme and Agfa Ultra Speed pan motion picture negatives.(Class II)To Walt Disney Productions, Ltd., for the design and application to production of the Multi- Plane Camera. To Eastman Kodak Company for two fine- grain duplicating film stocks. To Farciot Edouart and Paramount Pictures, Inc. Paramount dual screen transparency camera setup.
To Douglas Shearer and the Metro- Goldwyn- Mayer Studio Sound Department for a method of varying the scanning width of variable density sound tracks (squeeze tracks) for the purpose of obtaining an increased amount of noise reduction.(Class III)To John Arnold and the Metro- Goldwyn- Mayer Studio Camera Department for their improvement of the semi automatic follow focus device and its application to all of the cameras used by the Metro- Goldwyn- Mayer Studio. To John Livadary, Director of Sound Recording for Columbia Pictures Corporation, for the application of the bi- planar light valve to motion picture sound recording.
To Thomas T. Moulton and the United Artists Studio Sound Department for the application to motion picture sound recording of volume indicators which have peak reading response and linear decibel scales. To RCA Manufacturing Co., Inc. To Joseph E. Robbins and Paramount Pictures, Inc. To Douglas Shearer and the Metro- Goldwyn- Mayer Studio Sound Department for the design of the film drive mechanism as incorporated in the ERPI 1. Class III)To John Aalberg and the First National Studio Sound Department for the application of compression to variable area recording in motion picture production.
To Byron Haskin and the Special Effects Department of Warner Bros. Studio for pioneering the development and for the first practical application to motion picture production of the triple head background projector.(Class III)To George Anderson of Warner Bros. Studio for an improved positive head for sun arcs. To John Arnold of Metro- Goldwyn- Mayer Studio for the M- G- M mobile camera crane.
To Thomas T. Moulton, Fred Albin, and the Sound Department of the Samuel Goldwyn Studio for the origination and application of the Delta db test to sound recording in motion pictures. To Farciot Edouart, Joseph E. Robbins, William Rudolph and Paramount Pictures, Inc. To Emery Huse and Ralph B. Atkinson of the Eastman Kodak Company for their specifications for chemical analysis of photographic developers and fixing baths. To Harold Nye of Warner Bros. Studio for a miniature incandescent spot lamp.
To A. J. Tondreau of Warner Bros. Studio for the design and manufacture of an improved sound track printer. Multiple Award for important contributions in cooperative development of new improved Process Projection Equipment: F. R. Abbott, Haller Belt, Alan Cook and the Bausch & Lomb Optical Company for faster projection lenses; The Mitchell Camera Company for a new type process projection head; Mole- Richardson Company for a new type automatically controlled projection arc lamp; Charley Handley, David Joy and the National Carbon Company for improved and more stable high- intensity carbons; Winton Hoch and the Technicolor Motion Picture Corp. Don Musgrave and Selznick International Pictures, Inc. Gone with the Wind.(Class I)2.
Century- Fox Film Corp. Century Silenced Camera, developed by Daniel Clark, Grover Laube, Charles Miller, and Robert W. Stevens.(Class III)To Warner Bros. Studio Art Department and Anton Grot for the design and perfection of the Warner Bros. Class II)To Electrical Research Products Division of Western Electric Co., Inc., for the development of the precision integrating sphere densitometer.
To RCA Manufacturing Company for the design and development of the MI- 3. Uni- directional microphone.(Class III)To Ray Wilkinson and the Paramount Studio Laboratory for pioneering in the use of and for the first practical application to release printing of fine grain positive stock. To Charles Lootens and the Republic Studio Sound Department for pioneering the use of and for the first practical application to motion picture production of CLASS B push- pull variable area recording.