This implies that it's difficult or even impossible to verify the suspicion that the noise problem appeared suddenly. The scanner may have performed the same, always, but you only noticed it at a certain point.
Grain Dissolver is not supported by Silverfast. I'm scanning RVP50 slides.@scarbantia, that's with grain dissolver enabled, right?
Do you feel that you need to enable it on slide film? Unless it is Fuji Provia 100F and a scene with a lot of areas where infamous "pepper grain" is visible I would never enable grain dissolver. You loose a tiny bit of sharpness and scan time basically doubles (depending on the film this can cause the film to curl during scanning).
I think the difference is quite obvious.
Grain Dissolver is not supported by Silverfast. I'm scanning RVP50 slides.
Maybe I will buy another one and try to replace the components one by one.
Interesting. I only have SF 6.6.x where GD is supported. I don't use SF with Minolta 5400, since Vuescan does a better job (which is not always the case with other scanners).
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As said, with GD it's considerably worse:
View attachment 388870
And using a profile made from IT8 target would make it worse as well. All scans with 6x multisample, single sample is also much worse.
It's interesting that R, G, B noise patterns run independently from each other. G channel is the dominant one on my scanner.
Good luck then, because I have 3 of them, and they all show the same symptoms more or less.
@albireo can you post a 5400dpi tiff of a totally opaque material, scanned at exp. value of 1 and no multisampling? Either unprocessed raw of tiff with Colour balance set to None, 0.25 and 0.75 for low/high curve points and brightness 1.
A small 100x100px crop would be enough...
Notice the unevenness of the pattern. Is this what you're seeing? Does this suggest the line sensor is on its way out?
EDIT - just read the entire thread. Would be interested in any leads. I agree with post #30 by @koraks in that I had never noticed any patterns in my scans of normally exposed+developed negatives (I have no slides around here to test) so it seems to be a non issue for my work. However, if this is a symptom of decaying capacitors or the beginning of the end of the device, I'd be interested to know..
I doubt something is wrong with your scanner. It's in line with what others are seeing and I don't think all the scanners have rotten by now. This site (Italian) has the best test of Minolta 5400 (I and II) ever made and also has Nikon 8000 test. If you check the samples and lift the shadows heavily you can see similar noise and scanners were relatively new at the time of test.
Wow, that's very interesting! When you use GD, you have less light, and the scanner sets a longer exposure time or a higher signal gain.
I did a quick experiment:
I removed the backlight from the scanner and used an external light source to illuminate the film. (I propped up the grain dissolver).
Observations:
Silverfast measures the light and sets the white balance on startup, but does not correct for lighting irregularities. The Dimage Scan Utility software homogenize the brightness differences!
However! If I use stronger light, the scanner sets a shorter exposure time and scans faster. Stronger light = less noise, much more shadow detail and faster scanning! It's amazing with Multi-Exposure.
The zigzag pattern is not gone, but it can be significantly reduced.
I need to make a separately controllable RGB+IR LED backlight.
Yes, the Silverfast 6.6 supports the Grain Dissolver, and the backlight homogenity corrections. The operation is more similar to the Scan Utility software.
I think that's a red herring.I wouldn't exclude the possibility that current problems are related to changes in operating systems and driver software.
is it possible to replace the ADC and gain (rimshot) better noise performance?
Might as well replace the light source with something modern as well while you're at it.
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