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The Centre for Agricultural Mechanization Personnel Training (CODK) at the Institute of Agricultural Construction, Mechanization, and Electrification first started making science films in 1967, to fulfill its own needs for the technical training of the Department of Agriculture managerial staff. A relationship of film titles to the Institute’s research was established in the final phase. Film became one to the methods of scientific research implementation. Films do net merely report on the research alone. They are directed according to a script, and present the official position of die Institute with regards to a studied machine, technique, or technology. In 1970, research using film cameras was started. Initial observations encouraged the use of film techniques in the research processes. We produce educational and research films on color 16 mm film, with sound in either Polish or foreign language, for the Institute’s own needs, for agricultural schools and universities, for Regional Centers of Agricultural Progress, post graduate schools, and agricultural training centers. Eighty four titles have been produced to date. Between 1967 and 1990 approximately 13.000 copies were distributed to agricultural schools and universities, Regional Centers of Agricultural Progress (WOPR’s), and other recipients. Eighteen studies were conducted in research processes. Their results were used in production of basic, constructional, and testing subjects at the Institute’s Research Facilities, at the Harvesting Machinery Manufacturing Plant in Płock, and at the Agricultural Machinery Manufacturing Plant in Grudziądz. Research film materials were also used to produce educational films.
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High speed film testing of agricultural machines requires specialized equipment. This equipment consists of cameras capable of advancing film between 16 and 10.000 frames per second. Higher camera speeds are essentially not necessary for testing of agricultural machines. Cameras filming at speeds of up to 6.500 frames per second are most common in Poland. These cameras are of East European, British and Japanese manufacture, e.g. Pentazet 16 and Pentazet 16 A, manufactured in East Germany; Locam and Hyspeed, manufactured in England; and Himac 16, manufactured in Japan. Proper high speed camera testing of agricultural machines requires construction of camera stations and stations for the filmed objects. The stations are essential in order to provide proper lighting, a prerequisite to obtain technically correct film. As a rule, natural lighting alone is not sufficient, photographic spotlights and - even more portable and more effective - iodine-quartz lamps are needed, particularly when filming at speeds in excess of one thousand frames per socond, even for 27 DIN film. Appropriate light meters must be used for high speed filming. Cameras provide film material for research. This film must be analyzed both qualitatively and quantitatively. Qualitative analysis is done using 16 mm film editing tables and projectors. Most appropriate are freeze-frame projectors capable of advancing film both forward and back, also one frame at a time. Special analyzer-projectors, such as the British Specto MK III, the Swiss Bolex 521, or, even better, the electronic analyzer of the Vanguard Motion type, or other analyzer-projectors are required for quantitative analysis of film material. Quantitative analysis done by hand by the researcher himself, or herself, using film analyzer-projectors do not ensure objective quantitative analysis, thus producing nonobjective research results. Nonetheless, such analysis provides adequate overview and general trends, allowing the researcher to advance specific conclusions. Such analysis does not destroy the research film material and this material may, in the future, be repeatedly analyzed using, for example, electronic or computer techniques.
This work is dedicated to the memory of the late professor Jacek Orzechowski, who pioneered the use of film methods in scientific research and university education. Professor Jacek Orzechowski has left behind a lifetime of research achievement. He was a man of wide horizons; deeply intellectual. He participated, as an expert, in the work of numerous committees and problem-solving teams. In 1989, Polish science and academia lost a great scientist of high authority. His sudden death at 66 brought a premature end to his intense life. May he rest in peace.
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