This is a good scanner, and a third-party company makes special anti-Newton glass that will really keep the 35mm film strips flat. I'm very pleased with mine; I'd buy this one if I didn't already have one! Here's a 6X6 scan made on the 3200:
This is a good scanner, and a third-party company makes special anti-Newton glass that will really keep the 35mm film strips flat. I'm very pleased with mine; I'd buy this one if I didn't already have one! Here's a 6X6 scan made on the 3200:
I'm only selling this one because I have two, and there seems to be no need for a backup. These Epsons just keep going and going. This one was my backup and was hardly ever used except once when I had a lot of 4x5 negatives to do as a rush job.
This is a good scanner, and a third-party company makes special anti-Newton glass that will really keep the 35mm film strips flat. I'm very pleased with mine; I'd buy this one if I didn't already have one! Here's a 6X6 scan made on the 3200:
I wasn't aware of this scanner but it seems it would do fine for web and emailing purposes. I really want a 700 or 750 and will get one but that's down the road. In the meantime this looks far better than no scanner that will do film. There's others on the 'bay if this one doesn't work out.
I just did some checking on this - I thought it was new enough to have 64 bit drivers but all I can find is a color management profile for 64 bit. I'm running 64 bit Windows 7. Anyone know if this will work, maybe with Vuescan?
I can attest that this is a superb scanner. I've had one for 7 or 8 years, lightly used but wonderful. In my view the only shortcoming of this unit compared to the 700/750 is the 3.0 density maximum. The 700/750 units are 4.0, a big improvement.
I just did some checking on this - I thought it was new enough to have 64 bit drivers but all I can find is a color management profile for 64 bit. I'm running 64 bit Windows 7. Anyone know if this will work, maybe with Vuescan?