I did? I only have Epson 3200 (now sold), 4870 and 4990. Any information I give on V700 is usually obtained from my friends who have given me scans but I did not drive the process.
Sorry, I got that wrong. You did post results from the 4990 here in
this thread, and stated it's close to the V700.
Definately I've said that the blue channel is weakest on scans and significantly challenges the Dmax
I don't think it's a Dmax problem, especially with negative film which doesn't even get all that dense (see the data sheets! ). The problem is rather the small Dmax-Dmin combined with awful bit resolution. Not surprizingly, the blue channel starts at the highest Dmin, so it suffers most from this. Don't forget that D is a logarithmic measure while all digital sensors record in a linear fashion.
Let's take this Fuji film once more. Dmin for the red channel is 0.2, if we assume 8 bits per color channel we assign the value 255 to D 0.2 (before channel inversion). Dmin for blue is 1.0, which would be assigned the value 255/(10^(1.0-0.2)) = 255/(10^0.8) = 255/6.3 = 40. This means we have only 41 distinct blue channel values for the whole range from bright white to pitch black. The green channel does slightly better: 255/(10^(0.75-0.2)) = 255/(10^0.55) = 255/3.5 = 72, almost twice as many discrete steps as the blue channel. Only the red channel yields the full 256 steps.
Note that the 8 bit resolution per color channel does not come from the file format used to store the data. It comes from the poor signal to noise ratio of the scanner line sensor!
Its true that there are advantages in scanning slide, but that does not mean there are not advantages in scanning neg.
There may be great advantages in scanning negs on a really good scanner. The crap the electronics industry is throwing at us seems to perform better with slide material. I failed miserably when I scanned neg film with a Nikon Coolscan V ED and gave up on color negative film as a result. Which is a shame as I really did like the look of Portra and the new Ektar.
They shoot digital color which eliminates scanning altogether.
I meant professional film scanner folks, not professional photographers.
Do you have a link where I can see some of your scans?
I can post some samples here if you want. Tell me what you want to see.