Well, I have two comments about this:
1) I looked at the website link, and it is VERY obvious, even on the
small jpegs which is which. The SS4000 scan is much more sharp and
detailed. It literally didn't take me a second to figure out which was
which.
2) A better comparison, in my opinion, would have been to do a 35mm
slide with both scanners, because it is where the flatbeds really begin
to fall apart. You are "accommodating" the flatbed with a larger format
image to get the information you require from it.
I think that for medium format films (especially larger than 2.25" x
2.25", flatbed become a reasonable alternative in non-critical
applications, mainly due to the tremendous savings over dedicated medium
format film scanners. But let's not fool ourselves, a dedicated film
scanner, or very top of the line flatbed with a separate film drawer is
always going to surpass the quality of a relatively inexpensive flatbed,
if nothing more than because of the nature of the mechanics and glass
quality.
For 35mm scanning, and particularly in consideration of current price
drops, a dedicated film scanner is cost effective.
Art
2)
Johnny Johnson wrote:
> At 11:10 PM 10/25/02 -0500, Stan wrote:
>
>
>>Put another way, is it silly/unwise/profligate to spend more on a scanner
>>than the $399 or so for a 2450 if the printing device will be something like
>>a 2200 inkjet?
>>
>
> Hi Stan,
>
> I had a friend scan a 2 1/4 slide on his Epson 2450. Then I cut the trans
> down just enough that I could scan it on my Polaroid SS4000 at
> 4000spi. Next I printed out crops from the scans on my Epson 1270 printer
> at a scale that would equate to a 13"x13" print of the full 2 1/4"
> slide. If I remember correctly my friend used the Epson twain with the
> 2450 and I used Silverfast with the SS4000. The colors from the two scans
> were slightly different, shadow detail was very similar, and the scan from
> the SS4000 was just a touch sharper but it wasn't anything that jumped out
> at you in the prints or on the screen. In fact, it was hard for me to tell
> any difference in the details in the two prints when viewed from arms
> length. I would think that there would be even less of a difference when
> scanning 4x5s.
>
> Here's a scan of the prints that I made for comparison. They were printed
> on a single sheet of 8 1/2 x 11 Office Depot glossy paper. The 2450 scans
> are at the top and the SS4000 scans are at the bottom.
>
> <http://home.attbi.com/~jjohnso4/Temp/TestPrint.jpg>
>
> Later,
> Johnny
>
> __________________________
> Johnny Johnson
> Lilburn, GA
> mailto:jjohnso4@attbi.com
>
>
>
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