Hello Ronald, as the previous person has stated, just like with your camera equipment you tend to get what you pay for. I have tried out a few different scanners over the years as I have many slides dating back to the late 1970s [and I only went over to digital about 5 years ago!]. At the cheaper end of the market the result were very mixed and often involved a number of scans to get the image to some kind of decent standard. Don't get too hung up on the "14Mp" part of the marketing for this scanner. After all would you think a 14Mp pocket camera would take a better photo than even a 6Mp DSLR??, no I didn't think so.Ronaldsnl wrote:Hi all,
Does anyone has experience with below mentioned slide digitalizer?
http://www.amazon.com/Wolverine-F2D14-N ... B005P99KT8
The Wolverine F2D14 is a digital image converter "slidedigitalizer" and actually it looks like it is a small digital camera with a 14 Mpeg sensor where your slides or negatives fit in.
It looks like a good and especially fast way to digitalize all the slides, where no tripod or alternative lightsource is needed.
I write this is english because so far I can see this system is only available in the US.
But I'm very curious what the quality of the lightsource is.
It only generates Jpeg but for my slides K64 or even 100 that should be OK.
I hope someone has already experience with this solution.
Ronald
Yep, 20 cent per piece, 15000 slides....SquAdmin wrote:If time is your constraint, why wouldn't you have someone do it for you? There are enough companies that offer slidescan services.
Hi Ronald,Ronaldsnl wrote:Yep, 20 cent per piece, 15000 slides....SquAdmin wrote:If time is your constraint, why wouldn't you have someone do it for you? There are enough companies that offer slidescan services.
Cheers
Ronald
Hi Iwan,Iwan Bogels wrote:Ronald, if you buy a Nikon Coolscan 5000 ED with batch feeder you will have one of the best scanners available. The batch feeder will allow you to have it scan 50 slides with one push of a button. If you let it start working when you go to bed or when you go to work, you can scan your 15.000 slides in half a year.
The price for a second hand Nikon Coolscan 5000 ED may be high, but these scanners sell like hotckakes. If you find one for 1500 euro, you can always sell it for 1300+. That way you get high quality scans for the price of a cheap scanner, and it may not even cost you more time.
I know that several people have chosen this option, and I am thinking about it too.
Succes,
Iwan
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