You may also mention the there are analog apmlifiers that are aimed to
boost the CCD analogue output signal and at this stage it is also
possible to control the gain (read exposure), however, this stage is
sensitive to any noise interferring the signal so that it would be
amplified also.
Alex
--- "Paul D. DeRocco" <pderocco@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
> > From: Bill Seramin
> >
> > What happens internal to the scanner when adjustments are made on
> the
> > scan software? In my mind I can only equate how a camera exposes
> film;
> > adjust exposure time and aperture. Now I am confident in assuming
> that
> > the scanner does not have a variable mechanical aperture, an
> equivalent
> > for shutter adjustment, and from what I can tell the lamp
> brightness
> > does not vary during scanning. So what happens when endpoints and
> > curves are adjusted in the scan software? Maybe I have dense film
> or a
> > dense brain, but I am having trouble visualizing what is going on.
>
> The only "hardware" variable is exposure time, which is how many
> milliseconds it spends on each scan line before moving on to the next
> one. I
> don't know about the Polaroid driver but in Nikon drivers this is
> labelled
> Analog Gain. Everything else is done by arithmetic on the resulting
> numbers.
>
> --
>
> Ciao, Paul D. DeRocco
> Paul mailto:pderocco@ix.netcom.com
>
>
>
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