Yeah, the vintage cinema gear is getting expensive. Especially anything made prior to WW2.
I got my start in Hollywood in the early 90's and there was tons of stuff floating around from the early days. Some of it may have even dated from the late teens and early 20's, but the bulk was from the 30's and 50's. Interestingly a lot of production of camera gear stopped during WW2, due to rationing. All of Mitchell's production went to the government for the war effort, so all those movies made from '41-45 were shot on cameras that the studios had bought in the 20's and 30's. Back in the 90's you could pick this stuff up for pennies.
In my case I purchased a 1936 Mitchell NC-R and they tossed in an 'old set of junk lenses' for free, so I would have something to shoot with. Nowadays those 'junk lenses' are hardly considered junk anymore, because they take the digital curse off the modern cameras....
Here's my 1936 Mitchell NC-R that I purchased in the 90's. It solid metal and tips the scale at around 80-90 lbs with the motor and a 1000 ft magazine. Once you throw in the head and tripod you're looking at about 110-120 lbs.
I really wish I had grabbed more of that gear back then.... There was some pretty spectacular stuff floating around in those days.
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