Marco B
Subscriber
Hi all,
I have a Canon 9950F flatbed that I have used for a couple of years now. Not very intensively, but on regular basis.
I know the scanners totally sucks for scanning film, and consequently have mainly used it for scanning small analog prints at about 400 ppi max, which it does very acceptably to even good.
Now I recently started noticing some banding issues. The banding is parallel to that of the scan unit and the CCD therein, that is, at a 90 degree angle with the scan units path down the scanned surface.
It is very regular banding turning up maybe each 1-2 seconds during the scan process. In between these bands, the scanned pixel surface looks fine.
Since the banding is parallel to the CCD, I think we can exclude a CCD issue, as the area without bands show each pixel can still operate properly.
Now I have read before about the possibility of issues with the light source. Not unlikely here, because they are cold cathode, not LED, and won't have an indefinite life time.
However: I also see it with the much less used negative / positive scanning! And since there is a second light unit in the top of scanner exclusively used for that, I think it is unlike both lamp units would go bust at the same time :confused:
So, what can cause such banding?
There is one other small thing that keeps nagging me: Some time ago, my electricity meter was replaced with a computerized "digital" one. Before that, it was just a simple "mechanical" one with a rotating disk.
Could this potentially cause some unwanted interference / small instabilities in the voltage that might be responsible for the banding, or am I completely rambling here :confused:
I have the vague feeling that the onset of the issues might have coincided with the installation of that unit...
I have attached a couple of screenshots. Please note the issue is not always that apparent at first. It is most visible at sharp light/dark transitions, showing up as greenish and reddish pixels, but as you can see, the banding passes from left to right through the entire image.
To make it more clear, I have upped the saturation of one of these screenshots to 100% in PS, which makes the banding much more clear (but of course screws up the colors entirely, but that is not the point here)
Scanning direction is top to bottom in these images!
The light sepia toned image is the original scan, the ugly orange one the max saturated, and the B&W one is the Green channel of the scan, that shows the affected bands maybe most clearly.
I have a Canon 9950F flatbed that I have used for a couple of years now. Not very intensively, but on regular basis.
I know the scanners totally sucks for scanning film, and consequently have mainly used it for scanning small analog prints at about 400 ppi max, which it does very acceptably to even good.
Now I recently started noticing some banding issues. The banding is parallel to that of the scan unit and the CCD therein, that is, at a 90 degree angle with the scan units path down the scanned surface.
It is very regular banding turning up maybe each 1-2 seconds during the scan process. In between these bands, the scanned pixel surface looks fine.
Since the banding is parallel to the CCD, I think we can exclude a CCD issue, as the area without bands show each pixel can still operate properly.
Now I have read before about the possibility of issues with the light source. Not unlikely here, because they are cold cathode, not LED, and won't have an indefinite life time.
However: I also see it with the much less used negative / positive scanning! And since there is a second light unit in the top of scanner exclusively used for that, I think it is unlike both lamp units would go bust at the same time :confused:
So, what can cause such banding?
There is one other small thing that keeps nagging me: Some time ago, my electricity meter was replaced with a computerized "digital" one. Before that, it was just a simple "mechanical" one with a rotating disk.
Could this potentially cause some unwanted interference / small instabilities in the voltage that might be responsible for the banding, or am I completely rambling here :confused:
I have the vague feeling that the onset of the issues might have coincided with the installation of that unit...
I have attached a couple of screenshots. Please note the issue is not always that apparent at first. It is most visible at sharp light/dark transitions, showing up as greenish and reddish pixels, but as you can see, the banding passes from left to right through the entire image.
To make it more clear, I have upped the saturation of one of these screenshots to 100% in PS, which makes the banding much more clear (but of course screws up the colors entirely, but that is not the point here)
Scanning direction is top to bottom in these images!
The light sepia toned image is the original scan, the ugly orange one the max saturated, and the B&W one is the Green channel of the scan, that shows the affected bands maybe most clearly.