Tom Diaz
Well-known
Hiya, folks.
Earlier, I whined in RFF about the unavailability of a simple scanning service in the U.S. for shooters with films other than C41 color negative. With C41 you can take your film to almost any drugstore and, sometimes in an hour, get back developed negatives and a CD with decent 1000-dpi scans. Then you can go to town using the scans as proofs or for onscreen shows. (I use a desktop Minolta Elite 5400 II for high-quality scans when I see something for which I want an exhibition-sized print.) In other words, with C41, a shooter has almost the same workflow and turnaround time as a digital shooter, plus of course the nice variety of speeds and color palettes still available in C41.
For me, E6 film is more desirable than C41, but I have not been able to find labs in the US that would give me quick & low-res scans of E6 film for a reasonable price.
So I recently bought, on eBay, a used Sony UY-S90 scanner and also a Sony UYAS90SF slide feeder for it.
With this equipment, I am supposed to be able to take an uncut roll of any 35mm film--color or black and white, positive or negative--and the machine will make 1100-dpi scans of the whole roll in 4 minutes! The slide feeder will take a magazine of 50 or so slides and gobble them into similar scans at just a little lower speed. You can do scans with twice this resolution at (I'm sure) correspondingly slower speed. This is according to the specs; I have not yet received the equipment.
Does anyone have experience with this machinery? It was originally expensive (introduced about 7 years ago) and was obviously made for minilabs, to be part of the production flow with film developing and printing stations. I got the scanner for $227 and the slide feeder for $250.
In the U.S. I have had almost no luck getting people to tell me this kind of service was even possible, but of course that is partly the result of talking to sales people instead of people in the labs. Assuming this equipment performs as I would like, this all means that the kind of service I wanted is perfectly feasible technically, because there are processing labs that had just the right machinery, and some probably still have it. I realize that for most labs, they might not be getting enough e6 or b&w business to justify the labor and maintenance costs.
Evidently minilabs are unloading older equipment, so these things come up on ebay from time to time. (There is a newer model, the UY-S100, that is available for higher prices in new/refurbed condition.)
Anyway, I'd be interested in anyone's experience and will share my own.
Earlier, I whined in RFF about the unavailability of a simple scanning service in the U.S. for shooters with films other than C41 color negative. With C41 you can take your film to almost any drugstore and, sometimes in an hour, get back developed negatives and a CD with decent 1000-dpi scans. Then you can go to town using the scans as proofs or for onscreen shows. (I use a desktop Minolta Elite 5400 II for high-quality scans when I see something for which I want an exhibition-sized print.) In other words, with C41, a shooter has almost the same workflow and turnaround time as a digital shooter, plus of course the nice variety of speeds and color palettes still available in C41.
For me, E6 film is more desirable than C41, but I have not been able to find labs in the US that would give me quick & low-res scans of E6 film for a reasonable price.
So I recently bought, on eBay, a used Sony UY-S90 scanner and also a Sony UYAS90SF slide feeder for it.
With this equipment, I am supposed to be able to take an uncut roll of any 35mm film--color or black and white, positive or negative--and the machine will make 1100-dpi scans of the whole roll in 4 minutes! The slide feeder will take a magazine of 50 or so slides and gobble them into similar scans at just a little lower speed. You can do scans with twice this resolution at (I'm sure) correspondingly slower speed. This is according to the specs; I have not yet received the equipment.
Does anyone have experience with this machinery? It was originally expensive (introduced about 7 years ago) and was obviously made for minilabs, to be part of the production flow with film developing and printing stations. I got the scanner for $227 and the slide feeder for $250.
In the U.S. I have had almost no luck getting people to tell me this kind of service was even possible, but of course that is partly the result of talking to sales people instead of people in the labs. Assuming this equipment performs as I would like, this all means that the kind of service I wanted is perfectly feasible technically, because there are processing labs that had just the right machinery, and some probably still have it. I realize that for most labs, they might not be getting enough e6 or b&w business to justify the labor and maintenance costs.
Evidently minilabs are unloading older equipment, so these things come up on ebay from time to time. (There is a newer model, the UY-S100, that is available for higher prices in new/refurbed condition.)
Anyway, I'd be interested in anyone's experience and will share my own.