Ray Kilby
Established
Any advice on buying a scanner? Whats currently half decent and easy too use? I have a 25 year old Cannon which is just too cranky and too awkward and has finally refused to talk to my new-ish laptop. I am in the UK.
Yes the scanner needs a SCSi connection, Vuescan works fine. I like it a lot, but it's the interface that's the issue, plus it's slow and not easy to do multipole scans. I've never used a flatbed for film scanning.I have a 22 year old Nikon film scanner and a 20 year old Epson A3 flatbed scanner that are both working perfectly fine using Vuescan, so it might be worth checking your scanner model against the list of those that Hamrick support. As long as you don't have an interface problem, e.g. your scanner needs a SCSi connection, you will probably find that you can keep it going... assuming of course that you want to.
I think a lot comes down to what you try to achieve.
I completely agree with your opinion.NikonScan disappeared from macOS systems ages past, which never bothered me since I have been using Vuescan since Ed released it a bazillion years ago.
I've also never bothered to fuss and fidget with Vuescan (or any other scanning software) to get "perfect out of the scanning" images. I run Vuescan to obtain the maximum amount of data in the originals into my scan masters, and use LR and other image processing tools to render them. Why bother spending a lot of time setting white point on scans when, once you have the data in digital form, doing that in LR Classic is essentially a click or two away?
I prefer my tools to have discrete functions. Scanning software should scan data into digital form, not bother with rendering; rendering is the domain of image processing tools.
G