clay
Member
I've had this scanner for about two years now, and I noticed this weird behavior that has popped up when I have been scanning some Tmax3200 night shots:
My go-to software for scanning has been Vuescan. I like the fact that it can handle both my film scanners and my flatbed scanner, and it is pretty fast and easy to use. But I switched back to Nikon Scan 4 for scanning most of these nightime shots because it allows me a lot more flexibility to manipulate the curve on the scanner. In short, it enables me to 'cheat' the shadow contrast upwards by manipulating the curve so that it is convex upward. So far, so good.
The strange thing is that every 10th frame or so, it absolutely falls on its arse, and I then must switch to VueScan and adjust the contrast by messing around with the 'Tmax/D-76 C.I.' setting in the VueScan color control dialog box. And it works fine. What I don't understand is why the same piece of hardware can produce such different and seemingly unpredictable results depending on the driver software.
I have noticed a similar behavior with this scanner when I scan Kodachrome, but it works in the opposite direction: Vuescan basically sucks out loud at scanning Kodachrome, yet the defaults built into Nikon Scan 4 work beautifully.
I am not really looking for an answer to this question so much as letting anyone who owns this scanner or the Nikon 9000 know that it is worth experimenting with different scanner driver software when you run into a problem scan. Of course, if anyone knows exactly what is going on, I'm all ears (as anyone who has met me in person will corroborate).
My go-to software for scanning has been Vuescan. I like the fact that it can handle both my film scanners and my flatbed scanner, and it is pretty fast and easy to use. But I switched back to Nikon Scan 4 for scanning most of these nightime shots because it allows me a lot more flexibility to manipulate the curve on the scanner. In short, it enables me to 'cheat' the shadow contrast upwards by manipulating the curve so that it is convex upward. So far, so good.
The strange thing is that every 10th frame or so, it absolutely falls on its arse, and I then must switch to VueScan and adjust the contrast by messing around with the 'Tmax/D-76 C.I.' setting in the VueScan color control dialog box. And it works fine. What I don't understand is why the same piece of hardware can produce such different and seemingly unpredictable results depending on the driver software.
I have noticed a similar behavior with this scanner when I scan Kodachrome, but it works in the opposite direction: Vuescan basically sucks out loud at scanning Kodachrome, yet the defaults built into Nikon Scan 4 work beautifully.
I am not really looking for an answer to this question so much as letting anyone who owns this scanner or the Nikon 9000 know that it is worth experimenting with different scanner driver software when you run into a problem scan. Of course, if anyone knows exactly what is going on, I'm all ears (as anyone who has met me in person will corroborate).