Seriously???
Yes I think so, all the electronics and PC software are finished and working. I’ve designed the whole mech design in cad, just a case of making it and seeing what’s wrong

Seriously???
I am seriously interested in this! Please keep us updated. My ancient pakon needs a new companion.Yes I think so, all the electronics and PC software are finished and working. I’ve designed the whole mech design in cad, just a case of making it and seeing what’s wrong![]()
20-25k for this is insanely expensive considering the manufacturing cost.
I would like to know if others would be interested in a product like this if it cost around 1k. I designed all the electronics and software for a scanner like this a few years ago. It's all working but I haven't assembled the mechanical parts yet. I could finish this off and get it on kickstarter with not a lot of effort. What do you lot think?
My current setup all for all the hardware is less than $10K, but well north of $5K, and I can average digitizing a roll of 36 exposure 35mm film in less than 5 minutes with an additional ~15-20 minutes to post process the roll, make any adjustments to fix the white balance, exposure, etc, spot out dust, and get deliverable files packaged up ready for upload. The realistic cost of the code I run to realize all this is about the same as the hardware cost if you remove the time spent with me just being stupid and figuring things out, so all in, I'd not be willing to spend more than ~$15K unless it was faster, or required less of my attention.
It depends on the size of the lab, and if that's all that they do. Processing and scanning film isn't my only revenue stream. If that's all I did and I had enough film coming in, I'd be making huge investments into getting finished files way faster. A few years ago I had a lot of mail order business, however, enough new labs have popped up where people didn't have to mail stuff in that a lot of that business has died down, at least in the SF Bay area. Hell, I get a lot of business just from people who don't want to drive one town over to drop their film off to the lab they were using before they found my lab, much less mail it out and pay for shipping. Either that, or a lot of people started home developing, which given how many home processing kits I sell, has been a booming business.That amount of time is a complete non-starter for any lab. 25 minutes per roll of 36 exposures? You can do only 20 rolls a day??? Assuming you're working 10 hours???
One of the scanners in development I'm aware of does 7.5 frames at roughly 6000 pixels in the long dimension per second. That's a workflow. Hell our old HS1800 can do a roll of 36 exposures, to 8x12" deliverable scans, in less than 2 minutes.
Really cool! I am not asking you to violate any NDAs, but since you mentioned the existence of several scanners in development, do you mind sharing a rough preview of what may be coming? The model you've described is optimized for volume, but have you heard of a modern take on Flextight or even a Coolscan? Something like 10-15 minutes per roll and true 5,000DPI for both 120 and 135?One of the scanners in development I'm aware of...
Really cool! I am not asking you to violate any NDAs, but since you mentioned the existence of several scanners in development, do you mind sharing a rough preview of what may be coming? The model you've described is optimized for volume, but have you heard of a modern take on Flextight or even a Coolscan? Something like 10-15 minutes per roll and true 5,000DPI for both 120 and 135?
Let's wait for the first prototype. As of now, all I see is a "non contractual" 3D render and unverifiable promises.
Grain appearance is notably more realistic and pleasant at higher magnifications at 3k dpi vs 5k, especially when developers like Rodinal or Infosol are used. In fact, I believe that low resolution scanning produced the myth of Rodinal's "large" grain. People who wet print tend to have a better opinion of those developers.In all honesty, 5000dpi is really overkill for nearly any film. You’re not going to get much use out of anything above 3000. Using higher resolution makes the pixel size smaller for any given equal sized imager which will have other issues like higher noise and slow readout times.
Grain appearance is notably more realistic and pleasant at higher magnifications at 3k dpi vs 5k, especially when developers like Rodinal or Infosol are used. In fact, I believe that low resolution scanning produced the myth of Rodinal's "large" grain. People who wet print tend to have a better opinion of those developers.
We here at Photrio are generally operating inside a bubble that isn’t really reflective of the current film consumer marketplace reality.
@Adrian Bacon You are not going to convince me to stop trusting my eyes. I view my scans on high-DPI "retina" 27" display. This is the norm in 2023. High resolution scans of 35mm HP5+ negatives show up visibly crisper and their grain is visibly "tighter" than common lab resolutions deliver. I am talking about simply hitting the full screen button in Apple Photos. No need to zoom or pixel peep.
This is objective reality.
Your message of hitting diminishing returns beyond a certain good-enough point is well received in principle. But it did not land. 3,000dpi is simply not enough.
Adrian, let me save you some typing. I have been working with digital imaging chains (in lithography) for most of my career and quite familiar with how everything works. I also happen to have negatives that have been scanned on variety of equipment from cheap Epson flatbeds to Coolscans, Flextights and Creos, with known true DPI characteristics measured with USAF targets. I have also built several camera-scanning rigs using sensors ranging from 24MP to 100MP with pixel shift and without.
And when I say that scanning at 3,000dpi produces distorted grain appearance (which gets exaggerated by various digital "enhancements" at various stages of the imaging chain you're referring to), I mean exactly that. HP5+ scanned at 3K DPI will look like a coarse shit in almost all apps on all monitors. But if you have a high DPI display and a good renderer like Apple Photos, a high resolution scan will look absolutely gorgeous. It will look just as good as a wet print of the same size at a reasonable distance. Besides, there's always a high-magnification loupe one can examine their "grainy" HP5+ negative to realize that something is wrong with their scan.
Some refer to this issue as grain aliasing, but I have never seen a comprehensive definition of the term. But the basic idea is not hard to visualize: when your resolution is below a certain level, smaller-than-threshold grain particles get lumped together into weird looking clumps with unnatural patterns, and god help you if you apply sharpening and excessive JPEG compression on top.
That's fine, however, your experience is specific to you. The vast majority of my clients don't have your experience, and I'm sure my client base isn't unique. They experience scans on their phones. Many of them don't even have computers (shocking I know, but that's how it is with many of the younger generations, they either use phones or tablets or both, nary an actual computer in sight, I can't even imagine getting through a day with nothing but a phone or tablet, but they seem to manage to do so with few if any problems), so you have a fairly high resolution display to look at scans on (as do I), but that's not really reflective of the broader film user base.I did not mean to imply that I am more knowledgeable than you, @Adrian Bacon. I apologize if you feel this way. I just did not feel like going on tangents of how we perceive detail or how monitors and sensors work. Instead I have been zooming into a very specific use case: the grain appearance of 35mm ISO 400 scans when viewed full-screen on "retina" displays continues to benefit from scanning resolution increase beyond 3000dpi. We can agree to disagree on how significant those improvements are, but I did not want to expand the scope into fine image detail, printing, low-res monitors, mobile, etc.
a very specific use case: the grain appearance of 35mm ISO 400 scans when viewed full-screen on "retina" displays continues to benefit from scanning resolution increase beyond 3000dpi.
Putting monitors aside for a moment, the image file data will have distorted grain due to the phenomena frequently called grain aliasing, but generally all A/D converters introduce this distortion, subject to sampling frequency AKA resolution. De-Bayering artifacts also contribute to this.
Software image renderers have gotten pretty sophisticated at down-sampling bitmaps to RGB pixel grids, and generally they perform better when they have extra pixels to work with
My point is I wish people would stop using the term grain aliasing and instead just articulate that they don't like the way the grain looks with a given setup. 99.999% of the time its either just simply less resolution, or the effect of some other artifact being introduced somewhere in the image processing pipeline after the acquisition stage. Grain aliasing is largely an internet myth being propagated by people who say it's grain aliasing whenever they see grain they don't like. No it isn't. Real grain aliasing is extremely ugly, and you'll know when you see it. If there's something somebody doesn't like about the grain they're seeing, instead of just saying it's grain aliasing, actually try to figure out why it looks that way. Maybe the answer actually is more resolution, or maybe the answer could be using a different raw image processor to see if you get different results (or a different demosaicing algorithm), or maybe the answer is not blindly sharpening the daylights out of it like many people do with digital images, but it's very unlikely to be actual grain aliasing, especially if using anything but the few known scanner and software combinations that do actually produce aliased output, and those combinations haven't been made or widely available for a long time now, which is a good thing. Now if we can just get people educated enough know that it's unlikely be that, but rather something else.your point is?
You sound as if I'm criticizing your services, but I have never seen your scans (if 3000dpi your target then it's purely a coincidence) and maybe I'm just not your target audience?
We got sidetracked down in the weeds a bit. The original disagreement was that more resolution was diminishing returns. I've already stated my case for why it is, so won't re-litigate it here again. If that doesn't work for you, that's OK, after all we're a couple guys on a pretty hard core enthusiast forum discussing things that most people don't understand, don't care to understand, and largely don't care about.I can't quite understand what exactly you're disagreeing with?
My original post which asked for a 5,000dpi device specifically referred to low-volume enthusiast grade scanner like a modern X1. Apparently a scanner with such specs was a good idea back then, and I am a bit lost why you think it's not a good idea now.
maybe put together one or two verified hardware packages or hardware lists of commonly available off the shelf hardware
Well, sure. Except everyone is failing to do that. Every color inversion software I tried produced default results not as good as Nikon software supplied with Coolscans. In a separate thread I remember you posting how much extra work (years) it would take you to convert your software to accept commonly available inputs. Besides, nobody actually makes commonly available inputs dedicated to film scanning. Instead, users are suffering with old and antiquated scanners or re-purposing digital cameras for the task. My camera scanning rig was close to $7K and using it still sucks because every single component, except the Negative Supply holders, is not used as originally intended. And there's literally nothing I can spend more money on to improve my scanning experience. I can drop another $10K for a tiny marginal improvement but on the process/experience side I'll continue to suffer with a horrific contraption anyway.No, the best long term course of action is to make software that works with a wide range of commonly available inputs
Creating a separate comment regarding another tangent you mentioned: business models. You raised good points there, the major one is the low LCV of one-time hardware purchase. But the elephant in the room is market size. Big enough market cures everything.
Let's say there 1M of people who're willing to spend $5K on a film scanner which offers meaningful improvement over their camera rig. Let's assume the scanner lasts 10 years on average and your market share is 25%. This means 25,000 units sold per year. If you take $3K from each sale, that leaves you about $1K per unit at ~65% gross margin, i.e. $25M/year for OPEX and profit. I may be off here and there for simpler math, but these numbers are not bad... assuming there's indeed one million people who'll want it.
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