peterB1966
Member
Hi, all - a friend gave me a family member's old Epson V600 just as I was returning to shooting on film, so I was frothing to develop my first roll and scan it. But the scans are awful!
What I need to know is: is this normal; is there an affordable fix;would I need to take it in, etc?
Some notes:
The two little sensors I had to clean
Streaking on a colour scan
Same image, scanned in mono
Same image, scanned in colour at a different time - note how different the streaking is from the other colour scan
And then, below, a different strip, just to have more examples:
What I need to know is: is this normal; is there an affordable fix;would I need to take it in, etc?
Some notes:
- The film looks fine, and you will see in the examples below that the streaking on the same photo looks totally different on different scans
- I don't have the film-holder trays yet (it takes weeks to get it to Cape Town, so I am still waiting for my order) and there was massive streaking on my first scan, which the AI suggested might also be cause/exacerbated by light leakage - so I have cut a window into some black card and am using that for now (you will see the grey underside in the scans)
- The first attempt was scanning a mono image in colour mode - gave me a massive yellow streaks running across the strip. When I converted the image to greyscale, it disappeared, so then I scanned in black and white mode, but there was massive grey streaking. So then I scanned it in colour again, and reconverted to grayscale, but this time it did not disappear, it looked like the black and white scan. Weird!
- I found comments about cleaning the two little sensors at the start of the glass (see first image, below) but that seems associated with thin blue lines appearing on the scans, and does not appear to have made a difference.
The two little sensors I had to clean
Streaking on a colour scan
Same image, scanned in mono
Same image, scanned in colour at a different time - note how different the streaking is from the other colour scan
And then, below, a different strip, just to have more examples: