There’s the Epson 12000XL scanner. It comes in 2 models; one is just flatbed 
and the other can do slides and negatives. But flatbed scanning can be very 
slow especially at 600 dpi. For the same price or less you could probably setup 
a camera copy stand with LED lights that would enable quicker capture although 
you might only get 400 dpi, which I think is actually acceptable for text. A 
Canon EOS 5DS DSLR will give you 50mp.

Jenn Morris
Digital Imaging Manager
MIT Libraries, Distinctive Collections
617.253.7286
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Out of respect and care for library staff and for our community, the MIT 
Libraries have suspended all in-person services until further notice. For 
updated information and details, see https://libraries.mit.edu/about/covid19/.

On Jun 22, 2020, at 7:51 PM, Will Martin 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

We just got a grant from the NEH as part of the CARES act.  As part of it, 
we'll be scanning a whole bunch of stuff, such as evidentiary documents from 
some of the Nuremberg trials, plus the personal papers of an early 20th-century 
senator from our state.  The grant is covering rather more people than we 
usually have scanning documents, so we've developed a need for a few more 
scanners.

The material is almost entirely text.  Our archivist thinks that 600 DPI scans 
are probably sufficient for that purpose.  Many of the documents are fragile, 
so sheet-fed scanners are (sadly) not an option.  We are already equipped with 
some very fancy high-end scanners that can handle anything that actually needs 
high-resolution scanning, or materials like microfilm/slides/etc.

So what I need are some decent-quality flatbed scanners.  Does anyone have any 
recommendations, or things to look out for?

Will Martin

Head of Digital Initiatives, Systems and Services
Chester Fritz Library
University of North Dakota

Reply via email to