Lynn Allen wrote:
Sorry about that double post, everyone. I *hate* my Mail service!!! ;-)
Didn't you just pretty much just make it a triple post? ;-)
And yes, I'm editing the rest out so that it won't be a quad.
Art
On Tue, 10 Jul 2001 20:36:11 -0700 Arthur Entlich ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
It is not produced by Microtek, and I do not believe the Microtek 35 is
the same product. It may be called other names in the UK, however.
AFAIK it is produced by Pacific Image who are a brand owned by Microtek,
Tony Sleep wrote:
On Tue, 10 Jul 2001 20:36:11 -0700 Arthur Entlich ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
It is not produced by Microtek, and I do not believe the Microtek 35 is
the same product. It may be called other names in the UK, however.
AFAIK it is produced by Pacific Image who are
*** spend the Time on the downside.
Best regards
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Tony Sleep)
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: filmscanners: Primefilm 1800i
Date: Thu, 12 Jul 2001 09:36 +0100 (BST)
On Tue, 10 Jul 2001 20:36:11 -0700 Arthur Entlich ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote
Tony wrote:
AFAIK it is produced by Pacific Image who are a brand owned by Microtek,
and I believe used for entry-level flatbed scanners which are sold at
lower prices than Mtek.
FWIW, I just bought a Mtek flatbed for $50US (about as entry level as you
can get), to fill in for my HP 6300C
Sorry about that double post, everyone. I *hate* my Mail service!!! ;-)
--LRA
From: Lynn Allen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: filmscanners: Primefilm 1800i
Date: Thu, 12 Jul 2001 15:54:58 -
Tony wrote:
AFAIK it is produced by Pacific
Jawed Ashraf wrote:
I have a 1800. It is made by a company called Pacific Image whose website is
at:
www.scanace.com
The scanner can only take bare strips of film - it won't accept mounted
slides.
The units sold in North America scan slides as well. It is both stated
in the
As those who bother reading my comments know, I am an advocate of buying
used equipment and non-bleeding edge. It saves money, it sometimes even
protects you from the first buyer screw which means you end up paying
the most for a product which isn't perfected, and end up playing beta
tester
Steve Greenbank wrote:
In the UK I think this scanner is available under several brand names
Jessops 1800U ,Black widow filmscan 2000 and Microtek Filmscanner 35. I
would suspect of these Microtek may be the real manufacturer.
It is not produced by Microtek, and I do not believe the
So, the very old 'caveat emptor' should always be in force with ebay
purchases.
The best one I saw was
Playstaion 2 Box and Receipt
Bidding started at $1 and I think there was no reserve.
There were many bids and eventually someone had the winning bid of $425. A
little over the top but
to fit it in.
Sorry for the confusion...
Jawed
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Arthur Entlich
Sent: 11 July 2001 05:19
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: filmscanners: Primefilm 1800i
Jawed Ashraf wrote:
I have a 1800
I suspect I need to take back my comment about the 1800 being unable to
scan
mounted slides. I could get it out of the box and try to fit a slide in
there, just to be sure. Maybe I'll bother in an idle moment.
I have a PrimeFilm 1800i sitting in the closet. It definitely can scan both
film
For those interested in buying their very first film
scanner, or trading up from an existing model, I humbly
suggest eBay as a source of very good deals, particularly
at the moment -- where new market entries from several
major vendors are causing a lot of turnover in equipment.
If you're
result.
Steve
- Original Message -
From: rafeb [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 1:08 PM
Subject: Re: filmscanners: Primefilm 1800i
For those interested in buying their very first film
scanner, or trading up from an existing model, I humbly
suggest
I have a 1800. It is made by a company called Pacific Image whose website is
at:
www.scanace.com
I have a folder of images I produced using this scanner at:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/folder?folder_id=124018
Overall I came to like this scanner - though my first few scans made me howl
in
Richard Schreurs [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is this Primefilm scanner a good tool for my needs? How's the software
that
comes with it, and what is the difference between the 1800i and the
1800u??
From what I've read, the Primefilm isn't worth touching. You'd be better
off
with the Acer Scanwit.
Well I dunno. I thought the dregs of the filmscanner market was the
Tamarack 2400 aka Jenoptik. I bought one a while ago from an outfit in Aus
who tried to talk me out of it (I took it on a discounted no-recourse
basis). It was actually reasonably OK till it sheared a gear in the
filmholder drive
I saw the Primefilm 1800 demoed at Comdex this year, and although it is
not a top end scanner, to me, they cut corners in areas that were less
important, and kept quality up as a result, and I have recommended it
over the Tamarack 2400 to people on several lists.
The most obvious area where
On Mon, 09 Jul 2001 15:30:45 +0200 Richard Schreurs
([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
I intend to buy me a filmscanner. I saw the cheap Primefilm 1800i. I
want
to use it to store my photos on CD-rom and the internet. I don't really
need high resolutions, 1800 dpi would do it.
I have never
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