Muki.Dorifuto.com Photography talk with random tangents into the unknown

21Mar/100

Mini Animania Sydney 2010 Convention Report & Photos

Aurora Entertainment (AE) hosted the 2010 Mini Animania convention at Australian Technology Park (ATP) on 20 March 2010.

This marks the first of the Animania series of convention this year, with AE hosting other conventions in Brisbane, Melbourne and Adelaide later this year.

Traditionally, Mini Animania in Sydney has been hosted at the Citigate Hotel (formerly the Carlton Crest Hotel), but as attendance grew the venue was no longer able to accommodate the event. ATP has also played host to the main Animania Festival, Sydney, for the past two years. Unlike their flagship event, mini is held in bay 4 of ATP, which is a substantially smaller venue. In contrast to the main festival, Mini Animania has carpeted floors throughout and airconditioning serving two thirds of the event space.

The layout of the event was an improvement over that at the Citigate Hotel, with few bottlenecks and ample space to move about. The stallholders area was relatively spaced out considering the number of vendors, artists and community groups that were present. Madman Entertainment were again not present. The stallholders area was the first to be hit when the doors opened, on time. Staff processed preregistered attendees while they waited in line, rather than at the door, a concept they've used at previous conventions to improve entry time. By 11am the majority of people were inside the venue. Patrons buying tickets at the door could not be processed in line, possibly due to the security risk of collecting money outdoors.

I never saw more than a handful of people playing twister at any given moment, but Cosplay Chess was relatively popular. The Cosplay Expo and Asian Ball Jointed Doll displays made a return to mini. The Cosplay Expo appears to be becoming a regular feature at Animania events. The ABJD display is a recent addition, appearing last year at the Sydney Animania Festival, but not at any of the mini interstate events.

A purpose designed auditorium was used as the main stage and took up about a third of the total event space. According to floor plans provided by ATP, the auditorium seats about 520 people. During the cosplay event, the theatre was completely full. Other events on the main stage included a talk by former WCS finalists Katherine Lee and Gabriella Lowgren; Game show, "Who wants to be OVER 9000?"; a talk by the Australian representatives for WCS 2010, Amber Martini and Melanie de Chantraine; an introduction to the German representative for WCS 2010 and guest judge; and the awards ceremony.

The next Animania convention will be held in Melbourne on 10 April.

12Oct/090

Animania Adelaide Post Convention Mini Report

Last weekend, the Adelaide Festival Centre played host to the first Mini Animania to be held in South Australia. Animania has held mini conventions in other states with two in Brisbane (The Holiday Inn), one in Melbourne (Rydges) and one in Sydney (Citigate Central) in addition to their flagship convention in Sydney (Australian Technology Park). Entering a new state with existing competition (in the form of the already established AVCon), is not an easy task, but is not something new for Animania with already competition in Melbourne (Manifest) and Sydney (SMASH!).

Animania took a bit of a different spin this year, becoming a partner with OzAsia Festival, which has been running for the past two years. This meant that ticketing and registration for the event was done entirely through BASS. This theoretically should free up Animania's volunteers and enable faster entry into the convention. Whilst that was certainly the case, with most guests well into the venue within the first hour of the door opening (in comparison to Sydney Mini, during which the wait was a few hours if you were unlucky), it could be more the case that there simply weren't as many people queuing up.

Judging by the number of entrants into Animania's cosplay competition compared to other mini events, I would say that there was a distinct lack of attendees. Despite being a World Cosplay Summit Preliminary round for 2011, there were only a handful of cosplayers that actually entered and the quality of some costumes left a lot to be desired. Perhaps I've been spoilt by the huge jump in quality of costumes in the past few years, but I felt rather let down by some of the entries. (Mind you, the two WCS finalist groups were pretty good, but you expect that at that level.)

However, this is not something the convention organisers could have done much about. For all of the things within their control, they did them rather well. The main stage was quite possibly twice the size of Sydney Mini and the Games area had widescreen LCDs similar to those at Sydney Weekend rather than the el cheapo tvs usually found at Minis. There was also a small Cosplay Expo which has never made an appearance at an Animania convention other than at Sydney Weekend and the Art Area actually had a plethora of tables and chairs to sit down and draw at. The vendor's area was sufficiently large enough, but by mid afternoon, it was clear that some of the vendors were being overlooked by the crowd. It seemed that for once the supply outdid demand as the vendors area is usually stuffed like a tin of sardines at almost any time of the day.

The venue itself was more than large enough for the crowd attending and judging by the curtained off areas has plenty of potential for future growth. With almost all of Animania's mini conventions approaching the point of exceeding their capacity, this is a welcome change with some foresight given to expansion over the next few years.

The first year of a convention in a new location always has its problems, and whilst these were present they were at a minimum. Karaoke was ill placed and whilst it disturbed the least amount of people, wasn't attended very well at any time I was there. Furthermore, the screen was washed out by sunlight coming in through the large windows nearby. Most of my karaoke experiences have been in dark, intimate rooms and without an large audience that is the vendor's area so personally, I wouldn't have joined in either. There was also the matter of the Samurai group cancelling their act at the last minute, but no announcement was made about it. In fact, it was promoted on the main stage at one point. I can understand that last minute changes can prevent changes to the guide after it has gone to print, but not knowing on the day?

They say that a convention isn't necessarily about the event itself, but rather, the people. To an extent, I agree with this. If you turn up to an event expecting to be entertained, you're most likely going to be bored. Australian conventions seem to have a unspoken BYO fun rule. However, if the event organisers do a terrible job, then all is pretty much lost. For their first event in Adelaide, I think Animania did a fairly good job, but the fun factor wasn't brought along by the crowd. The level of organisation trumps existing mini conventions in Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney with a faster entry time, more on display, and better technology, but where was everyone? Animania has sure held up their side of the deal, but it feels like no one brought the fun.

Not living in Adelaide myself, I'm not sure how well marketed the event was. If their other conventions are anything to go by, they need to get the word out there and raise their attendance levels rather than riding on the success of past events. Would I go again? If I was in Adelaide at the time, sure, I'd drop in, but with the expectation that one year onward things are better. As Animania Weekend in 2008 left a lot to be desired and in 2009 it really picked up and shone through, I don't see why Adelaide can't do the same for 2010.

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15Sep/090

Fork Change

Got around to changing the forks on dwiffy's bike last night.

It's actually a lot easier than I thought. We removed the forks a few days ago, but didn't have a 30mm wrench or socket to remove the top of the triple clamp. Once we got that off, it's a matter of gently tapping the top of the triple clamp off, unthreading the clamps below that and pulling out the rest of the triple clamp from below.

In dwiffy's accident, the front forks and the bottom of the triple clamp were bent and the rim was cracked, so all of them had to be replaced. The replacement wheel was actually balanced pretty well, but the alignment may need to be checked. We'll see.

Installation of the new triple clamp and forks was pretty simple and if we didn't spend so much time dicking around with the ignition, we probably could have done the whole replacement in about an hour. Doing things slowly and surely is the way, though. It's simply a matter of tapping the top clamp back on (that 30mm threaded nut will hold it in place once on), feeding the forks up and tightening it all up in about four places. It's made me realise that motorcycles are actually really simple.

The axle is a two person job, unless you want to balance it on your foot, and has a few spacers on either side to stop the wheel from wobbling about once it's on. We greased her up pretty good, but despite that, we had to gently tap the axle in for a snug fit. I was a little concerned that there was no cotter pin on one side of the axle, but given the axle is held in place through four separate bolts on the underside of the forks, it's not going to go anywhere any time soon.

The brake calipers were a bit of a pain in the ass as during transportation, we'd squeezed the brakes a few times when they were off the rotors. Perhaps I'm missing something, but from what I've read people have seemed to have always just pushed the pistons back into their seats with their hands. I can never seem to do this and always have to end up clamping the back of the pads or using a screwdriver for leverage. I found out that the pads also weren't installed correctly by the previous owner, so we fixed those at the same time. It's a little worrying after finding out one of your brake pads could jump out.

There are still a lot of little things that need to be fixed, but at least it's back on two wheels now and no longer on the jack. In the next session, we'll be trying to get her started and seeing what we need to tackle first in order to get her roadworthy again.

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