68degrees
Well-known
Is there a stand alone film scanner that you load a roll of processed film into and walk away, come back later and all the scans are done and saved on a usb card?
My Nikon 5000 ED does that for 35mm film.
Roland.
The learning curve on a Creo IQ can be very steep.
The Coolscan V and 5000 are essentially identical at the hardware level, but Nikon crippled the software on the V to make it slower and also disallow using the SA-30 batch roll film loader and SF-210 slide feeder (which are also usable on the older Super Coolscan 4000ED). ...
I've never owned one but ran a lot of work through one at a local lab. There were 3 operators running an IQ3. One guy was light years better than the other two in getting great scans. All had thousands of hours on the Creo - doing wet scans. It got to the point where I had my jobs on hold for the single best Creo Pilot. Scan cost ran from $125 -$250 depending of the file size. The job would run until I was satisfied with the file. The good pilot could knock out great scans in one or two runs.
Is there a stand alone film scanner that you load a roll of processed film into and walk away, come back later and all the scans are done and saved on a usb card?
Consider an alternative to solving the real problem. Simply edit your negs on a lightbox and then scan only the real keepers. Editing negs is technically a very simple task. The art of editing is difficult but that applies no matter how you approach it technically.
Realistically, no one shoots more than 1-2 or 3 really good frames on a 36 exposure roll. The key is to identify them before you scan.