Opticfilm 120 at Photokina
Opticfilm 120 at Photokina
I was on the Plustek booth at the Photokina trade fair in Cologne Germany, today. Sorry for my bad English, but English is not my first language.
I have no personal or business relationship with Plustek, Lasersoft or other companies in the photo business except that I am a potential buyer of the Plustek Opticfilm 120 to scan my 10 year to 40 year old slides and negatives.
On the Plustek booth at Photokina there is one Opticfilm 120 on display, the scanner is connected to a Mac computer and a person from Lasersoft showed how the scanner works and showed the scanning process with slides and negatives he had provided. The person seemed to be from the technical, not marketing department of Lasersoft. I discussed with this person several aspects of the scanner and the software, which I write down in the following from my memory. Please take this information with a grain of salt, because I have no idea, how reliable this information is, if it is the truth or only marketing bla bla.
In the discussion about the scanner the person from Lasersoft told me, that the drivers for the scanner are not finalized yet. That is the reason, why there are currently no scans published. Lasersoft has received several batches of scanners from Plustek in the past and had to adjust the drivers to every batch.
Currently the driver for Windows is close to finalizing, two items shall be missing. He didn’t mention, which are missing. The driver for Mac is way behind, but the algorithms are already available from the windows version, so it is only re-programming the algorithms for the Mac. I asked how long it will take to finalize the drivers and he responded with something between two weeks and two months.
A scan of a 6 cm x 9 cm slide in maximum resolution of 5300 dpi takes about half an hour, depending on the driver, but that may change with the driver programming too, depending on the settings in the program like infrared based dust reduction, the amount of memory in the connected computer, the moon phase and so on.
I asked for comparison to Hasselblad Flextight and Nikon Coolscan 8000 / 9000. The person said, that the Flextight is a better league. The resolution of the Opticfilm 120 shall be higher compared to the Coolscans, but the Coolscans shall be faster in return. The Coolscan shall have focus adjustment, the Opticfilm 120 has not. The lens of the Coolscan shall be corrected to visible light and for infrared light in order to have a sharp infrared image for dust removal. The lens of the Opticfilm 120 is not specially corrected for infrared light, which makes the infrared image more blurry and more difficult to detect dust spots on the slide or negative.
The scanner looks as shiny as on the pictures, the slide and negative holders are quite sturdy, but made of plastic. There is no holder for framed medium format slides in frames of 7 cm x 7 cm. The person said that many visitors wanted a glass holder, and he will report this to the product manager of Plustek.
The scanner has at least two stepper motors, one to import the holders into the machine and a second one for the scanning process. I could see how in preview the picture was displayed on the computer display during the scanning process. It seemed to be no fake. During my visit of about half an hour the software crashed once, so that the scanner had to be switched off and on again. I did not check the high resolution quality of the images, as the current Mac driver did not contain the essential algorithms yet.
My impression is that both Lasersoft and Plustek are still working on the product and that it might take a while until you and I might be able to scan slides and negatives and we all have to be patient.
Best regards,
Guido