Rob <rcricci-(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:<(E-Mail Removed)>...
> I have several thousand family slides and 35mm negatives from the
> 60's through 90's that I would like to digitize. I think my needs are
> modest and would probably end up printing pictures up to about 8 x10
> from these scans. Based on what I've read I'm looking at two options,
> both are USB 2 which I think I need to easily transfer the files
> (compared to USB 1.1)
> 1) Minolta dual scan IV (3200 dpi) ~$300
> 2) Nikon coolscan V (4000 dpi) ~$600
>
> In your expert opinions is the Nikon worth the extra. It obviously has
> a higher scan resolution and appears to come with better software
> (ICE, etc). How noticable is the scan quality difference between these
> two
>
> By the way, I'm assuming that most agree that either of these is a
> better option than buying a 'good' flatbed like the new Epson 4870 for
> ~ $400
>
> Thanks for any advice and opinions,
> Rob
Unless the majority of your film is silver based black and white, and
maybe even then, I would lean towards the Nikon, or the Minolta Elite
5400, or something with infrared detection of defects. I have scanned
1800 Tri-X images with non-ICE scanner, and will have spent close to 2
years doing post scan cleaning of the Vuescan raw files by the time
I'm done, averaging 1/2 to 1 hour per image. On top of this, I spent
another 10 months in an earlier (doomed) attempt to cleaned finished
gamma files, before beginning again, cleaning the Vuescan raw files
directly.
Note, ICE (or FAIR) enabled scanners are mechanically different,
having infrared detection. This infrared detection can be used with
ICE software, or through different software such as Vuescan, or
manipulated as a distinct, infrared channel (RGBI), within Photoshop.
Bottom line, cleaning files manually is very, very time consuming.
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