good article-
for scanning I do not like to sharpen at this stage *specifically in RGB, I am not sure your method on this. I also am very generous with the end points hoping to get as much information as possible, I also am a bit tighter on my marquee to the image , (i try to set the borders to the black rebate with no white showing).*this maybe causing the big white spike at the right)
for Black and White negatives I use 16 bit greyscale(no sharpening),
as recommended for Pyro negatives I have used RGB 16 bit, and played with the XP2 settings for a starting point*higher d min point* this seems to work well with some but not all negs. Then convert with channels in PS.
I have met scanner operators who sharpen at scan stage and may have their own reasons for doing so . I feel that if the colour is not perfect in the scan which is almost always the case then sharpening only enhances an imbalance. This may cause some debate, but I recommend no sharpening at the scanning stage, *unless you are going from scan to application immediately with no stops in an editing software program*
Colour
I will white balance or multiple step nuetralize an image before applying any input sharpening.
I also use a digital colour meter which is in your apps on a Mac during the scanning stage. I set it to LAB numbers and is extremely helpful at the scanning stage.
It reads exactly the same as your info palette in PS and if you like using RGB numbers you can set it to that as well.
We have this meter on all computers and while scanning just after preview I will use this meter to look at my colours , and my grey , white and black points.
I find the tools on most software programs supplied with scanners to be very clumsy and by using this meter I can decide if I should change any settings before I commit to the scan button.
This tool is extremely helpful in any software application , If you understand the numbers and use them then a quick check can be done on any image in Bridge, Lightroom, Apeture before you bring it into PS for editing.
Its like a constant companion validating what each colour , density, ect is and is training you all the time to evaluate density and colour.
Ok ... I've put that "method tutorial" together ...
http://cjeastwd.blogspot.com/2010/02/black-and-white-neg-scanning.html
As always I would be grateful if folks who have more experience than me would cast they're eye over that and make any criticism of methods or false assumptions I've made
thanks