I have the 1800 with the capability to scan a whole roll.  It was a big
mistake.  Unless they figured out how to do it for the 3650, I'd advise
against.

CW
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Paul Sorenson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, July 19, 2004 9:44 AM
Subject: Re: Pacific Imaging scanner (Was: Scanner Test (Revisited))


> Thanks, Lon.
>
> My main reason for the 3650 was wanting to start a whole roll scan and
leave
> it to work, but it sounds like that isn't a real good idea.  Will probably
> go with the Minolta and have a couple hundred $ to put to work somewhere
> else.
>
> Paul
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Lon Williamson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Monday, July 19, 2004 5:19 AM
> Subject: Re: Pacific Imaging scanner (Was: Scanner Test (Revisited))
>
>
> > AFAIK, the PF3650 is a PF3600 with ICE, GEM, etc.
> > So it should be similar to mine, with more goodies.
> > I'm happy with the 3600, but have not used a marque
> > brand scanner.  Results I get seem quite comparable
> > to results I've seen on the net (snippets of actual
> > scans, not lopped-down resized JPEGS).
> >
> > Strong points seem to be fast scan times (if you
> > use firewire) and the software (I've never had the
> > hangups that other people report, but I keep the
> > computer it is attached to lean and clean).
> >
> > Weak points:  if you try to scan an entire roll, you
> > face two problems.  One is that a whole lot of that
> > roll flops around outside the scanner for quite a while,
> > collecting dust like flypaper attracts bugs.  Another
> > is that there is usually a frame registration problem,
> > so that at some point about 10 to 15 frames in, everything
> > gets shifted.  Finally, I've not seen good results from
> > chrome film with lots of dark; a DMax problem.  There can
> > be some butt-ugly noise.  I tested the DMAX by shooting
> > one roll of Reala and one of K-64 on night-time fireworks;
> > the results made me stop using chrome film.
> >
> > If you confine yourself to scanning 4- to 6-frame
> > strips typically delivered by a lab, the frame shift
> > problems are minimal to non-existant.
> >
> > Documentation hoovers, but as I understand it, that's
> > typicaly of any digital product these days.
> >
> > All in all, I feel absolutely no need to "upgrade".
> > My guess is, as long as you get used to a PIE and
> > digital work flow in general, and stick with BW or
> > color neg film, you'd feel the same.  If the only
> > reason you would purchase the PIE is because of
> > the "whole roll at once" feature, I doubt you
> > would use that feature often.  And if you want to
> > scan slide film, the Minolta would probably be the
> > better choice.
> >
> > -Lon
> >
> >
> > Paul Sorenson wrote:
> > > Lon -
> > >
> > > How happy are you with the Pacific Imaging scanner?  I was seriously
> > > considering the PF3650, but have been warned away from it by several
> > > sources, favoring the Minolta Scan Dual IV.  I'm most intrigued by the
> > > 3650's capability of batch scanning a complete roll.
> > >
> > > Paul
> >
> >
>
>


---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.720 / Virus Database: 476 - Release Date: 7/18/2004

Reply via email to