Well, I just bought one, arrived Monday, so I guess I can let you all know how it performs! I'm aiming to do some comparisons with my V700.
Wow, thanks for the heads up, I (100% linux) was almost ready to plunk down money for this beast!I was going to use Vuescan, I use it with my Epson V700 under Linux, though the RPS7200 isn't supported under Linux unfortunately.
unlocking the heads, connecting it up, letting it warm up etc etc, not to mention loading the negative/slide strips. It'll be interesting to see how that compares with the motorised feed of the Reflecta.
The feed is great, what I'm trying to workout is a way to handle the roll before and after entering the scanner.... Possible by using spring engine car tracks (toys) from ebay.....
http://img.auctiva.com/imgdata/1/5/2/5/6/5/2/webimg/623341820_tp.jpg
(those tracks are 41mm wide)
Now that looks like a genius idea!
Wow, thanks for the heads up, I (100% linux) was almost ready to plunk down money for this beast!
Is there a similar scanner which does work under linux? I'd be especially interested in a scanner that scan scan a whole 35mm roll in one batch ...
Hi
unlocking only needs to be done if you're posting it somewhere where gentle handling is not certain AFAIK, not just moving it around the place.
Yeah, I'm about to grab a pack for 5 euro at the local "craigslist" (leboncoin in France)...
I had those as a kid, and came to think about them direct after the first scanning of an entire roll here, it took my entire desk + half the wall (climbing up on a mat board......).
I have a V700 right now, running nicely under linux except for the fact that there is no betterscanning holder for 35mm strips and the V700 which makes my 35mm scans a bit soft. I probably got a bit spoiled by vuescan because they seem to support a very large number of scanners under linux, but apparently the Reflecta is not one of themThat's what the Vuescan site says anyway, supported under Mac and Windows but not Linux. I'm going to give it a go as I've got a dual boot machine, but I suspect it's right. The Epson V700 will work under Linux with Vuescan, but I wanted to upgrade to a better 35mm film scanner.
I'm not going to jump through burning hoops just because a scanner manufacturer thinks it's still 1998. Times have changed, for me it's another 450 Euros savedThe other option is to download the windows version of the Vuescan software and try in under trial mode under WINE, it might work.
Unless you have a six year old who likes to re-arrange your office from time to time, then I figure it's a good idea
cool ...Right, it's arrived. First impressions:
I didn't think that the resolution actually changed the DMAX ... I'd suggest getting a stouffer stepwedge (about $20) and then you'll know what the DMAX is ...First quick scans of Portra 160. On 3200 dpi there is little difference in resolution between it and the V700, but there is an apparent improvement in Dmax, the shadows are much more open with the Reflecta. I know this is pushing the V700 at that resolution, but I'd like a side by side comparison.
The reviews I've seen suggests the Reflecta tops out at 3800 dpi, but I thoughts I'd push it to 7200 dpi to see. Scans were surprisingly fast, and my word! Resolution down to the grain, and not mushy grain, sharp grain.
so next step is to try it properly with Vuescan and see what happens
So initially seeing the 3200 dpi scans I could have stayed with my V700, but push the resolution and it keeps on giving. It's going to be an interesting ride. I'll post more when I've done some more tests.
Did you try making scans with vuescan having more than one pass per scan?
If I do that everything freezes, vuescan guy says it's most probably a hardware problem, would be interesting to see if it works for you.
B&W negative, 3600, 2 passes -<booom>-
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