tlitody
Well-known
I'm looking a new dedicated film scanner. Primarily for 135 film. Which is the best of the current crop or do I need to get a Nikon 9000 ED or s/h 5000 ED..
Love the Plustek 7600, fairly competitive and good value.
I've never used the whole roll adapter myself. It's kind of expensive. Btw. there's a hack to circumvent the adapter. Forum member "Mabelsound" knows the trick (I couldn't find the thread where he presented it).
The Plustek 7600 has a real (measured) resolution of 3250dpi, less than half its rated resolution of 7200dpi. Which is also just shy of the Plustek 7500 at 3500dpi. Not bad really, twice what any cosumer flatbed is able of. I don't know what the real life resolution of the Nikon is, but would be surprised if it exceeded 90% of the rated figure.
I think the cheaper scanners double up the sensor lines so instead of having 3 lines with one each for R, G and B, They have 6 lines with 2 each of R, G and B.
The second set of lines are offset by half a sensor so they overlap. The result is they claim twice the resolution but infact all you really get is a bigger file with no extra detail. Hence half the claimed resolution. Flatbeds do the same.
I don't think the Nikon does that but not sure. Reading the sensor spec should tell you how many lines it has. If its only 3 then its true native res should be 4000.
I'm looking a new dedicated film scanner. Primarily for 135 film. Which is the best of the current crop or do I need to get a Nikon 9000 ED or s/h 5000 ED..
I guess its a new plustek or a used nikon unless there is something else worth looking at.