I'm a little late to this but the Epson Perfection V550 is supposed to be pretty much the same engine as the V500.  I keep looking at one but I haven't fired up my film scanner in such a long time...

On 12/10/2019 1:03 AM, Bulent Celasun wrote:
Flatbeds are ok, preferably with 35mm and 120 holders.
I have Epson V500 with those adapters (no longer on the shelves).
And I am a happy user of VueScan.
It is simply too good for a business model from the customer's point of view.

I also have a Nikon Coolscan V ED, a dedicated film scanner which is
no longer supported.
It does a better scanning of 135 but it can not take 120.

Bulent

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Scott Loveless <[email protected]>, 10 Ara 2019 Sal, 02:46
tarihinde şunu yazdı:
It's me again, Margaret.

My basement is full.  Not "there's some stuff on the shelves we don't
need and I'd like to clean them off to make room for the new Christmas
decorations" full, but "tiny, narrow paths that don't quite get me to
where I need to be, and if I don't come out in fifteen minutes call
the paramedics and hope they have the jaws of life" full.  If you'd
asked me about my SP500 I'd have responded in the affirmative, but
without a clue which box it was actually inside.  Nevertheless, I
found it the other day, along with a 135/3.5 Super Takumar and a
55/1.8 SMC Takumar.  (I do like the feel of a Super Takumar lens.)
The battery was surprisingly not dead and the operation of the
mechanical parts smooth and effortless.  The knurled bit on the end of
the film advance lever is possibly one of my favorite features to be
found on any camera.  Which leads me to film.  I need some.

Voilà!  The very next box I opened was full of film.  Some of it was
exposed, but the vast majority was unexposed 35mm.  Lots of slide film
and not an insignificant amount of b&w.  And another unexposed roll of
Kodachrome.  (Sigh.  I find one of these every once in a while,
crammed into a coat pocket, or a shoe box.)  It's all past its best by
date, but I think we're in business.

A certain person, who shall remain anonymous, but who's name rhymes
with Spark McRoberts, suggested I drag the black and white lab to GFM
one more time.  (Some of you may recall that I protested the photo
competition's switch to digital by souping and then scanning my own
film on-site.)  Plans are to be there this year with enough chemicals
to make your average state trooper call for SORT backup.

Which leads me to film scanners.  I need one.  The Canon
8400turdbucket is no longer supported.  They say the previous drivers
should work with DOS10, but they don't.  Flatbeds are ok, preferably
with 35mm and 120 holders.  I'm open to suggestion.

See you in May/June.  Don't say you weren't warned.


--
Scott Loveless
Camp Hill, PA  USA
http://www.twosixteen.com/fivetoedsloth/
     __o
   _'\<,_
  (*)/  (*)

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