Epson Perfection 3200 Photo.

The new Epson's scanner - Epson Perfection 3200 Photo - replaces the previous
model 2450 Photo. What is improved? Is it worth paying more? Unfortunately, the
market leaves no choice because the 2450 is a rare thing today. So, they promise
3200 x 6400 dpi, a built-in passive module for scanning transparent standard-size
originals - from 35mm films to 4"x9" slides, high maximum optical density
- 3.4 D, USB 2.0 Hi-Speed and IEEE1394 (Firewire).
The frames for slides and negatives supplied with the scanner are made
of good hard plastic and are handy in use. Flexure and Newton rings are
almost excluded while rainbow patterns are possible on wide and flexible
films. If you turn the film over, the defect will disappear in almost all
cases but quite often it will make it more blurry.


There are only two control buttons - power and start. By default the
Start button is set for the EPSON Smart Panel (the program supplied), but
you can choose another application. The computer controls the scanner with
the standard TWAIN driver EPSON Scan. Users of Windows and Mac OS 8.6 -
9.x can open the driver from any application supporting the TWAIN standard.
The scanner comes with EPSON Smart Panel and Adobe Photoshop Elements,
as well as with a light version of the SilverFastSE 6. As scanning of a
16bit file is not supported, you can't scan transparent materials and should
use the modest and full-featured EPSON Scan module. The scanner can work
in three modes with it: Full Auto Mode, Home Mode and Professional Mode.
The driver is extremely simple. You don't have to spend much time for
adjusting - the image optimizers will draw the best quality from the device
with so wide hardware parameters. When the maximum resolution was 600,
and the density hardly reached 2 D, we had to look for programs with
multipass scanning, exposure control etc. But all such measures didn't
make the situation much better. And if the scanning optical and electronical
parts were weak, no software could help it.
Don't expect any revolutionary ideas from the new solution after Epson
2450. The maximum resolution of 1500-2000 dpi for flatbed scanners with
glass and without focusing is reached already, as well as the dynamic range
over 3D. The only aspect left is speed.
The IEEE1394 (Firewire) has almost no advantage over the USB 2.0. But
Epson says that with the IEEE1394 the Perfection 3200 Photo scanner based
on the ASIC chip is almost three times faster than the previous model -
Perfection 2450 Photo. In case of a 35mm film 10 frames in the burst mode
are scanned via USB 1.1 during 15 minutes. Framing and tint and color correction
will need more time, and scanning of the same 10 frames will last an hour.
It takes 7 minutes to scan a slide of 6x6 in 3200 dpi into a 16bit file.
The speed is really high even without USB2/Firewire. And the resolution
of 3200 x 6400 can be achieved far not every slide scanner, especially
by a universal flatbed one meant for advanced non-professionals. The speed
is really important, but for a photographer who deals with films a resolution
and a density range for slides and negatives supported by the scanner is
of much more importance. That is why we will focus mostly on these parameters.
An ordinary narrow film and a mid-class camera with a zoom-lens allow
for 100 and 50 (respectively) lines per mm each. The overall resolution
is defined by the formula of sum of inverse values and makes about 35 photgraphic
lines, or 70 lines per mm if we count black and white lines separately.
Or it makes about 1800 lines per inch. So, a non-professional photographer
should have a scanner with the resolution of 1800 lines per inch. If you
use a good film (for example, of the resolution of 200) and want some reserve
for a sharp (reproduction) lens, you should go with 100 lines per mm and
the scanner's resolution of 2500 dpi. Film scanners usually have a resolution
from 2700 to 4000. Our scaner has 3200. 3200 is actually the sensor's resolution,
but there is a glass and a lens before it which worsen the contrast (i.e.
resolution), and, contrary to most modern film scanners, do not maintain
the focusing. That is why a flatbed scanner suitable for scanning negatives
and slides must have a good depth resolution - up to several mm (flexure
of the film, frame) with the blur circle comparable to the resolution -
1/3200", which is impossible. To find out a real resolution of the scanner
let's scan the resolution chart obtained with a reflex camera on the Mikrat-200
film in high resolution. We will scan the Mikrat negative with the emulsion
above and below and compare the result with what we could get with the
Nikon 8000ED at 4000 dpi.
Epson Perfection 3200 Photo

The fragments of the shots for different scanning resolutions are reduced
in the Photoshop to the scan size at 6400 dpi. As you can see, scanning
at the resolution over 1600 dpi (for the circular resolution chart) is
excesive. So, the scanner's effectiveness is about 2 sensors per line.
It's possible to estimate more precisely this parameter with the radial
chart, which gives us 1.6-1.7 sensors per line, which is equivalent to
the resolution of almost 2000 dpi. For comparison look at the scan made
with the emulsion turned over and one more made with the Nikon 8000:

It's obvious that it looks better without the autofocus and additional
diffusing glass. When the negative is turned over, the resolution gets
lower on the Epson 3600 as compared with the fragment above, and the Epson
3600 is far away from the Nikon 8000.

These are the fragments for the Kodak slide film combined in Photoshop.
The scanning resolutions are given in dpi. The blue tint are the Epson's
scans, and the neutral one is for the Nikon 8000. The resolution of 1800
is the maximum for Epson, but the Nikon 8000 can have a couple of the chart
lines more. That is why it's justified to use a real slide scanner for
ordinary films. And it's also obvious that there isn't much advantage over
the scanner with the actual resolution of 1200 dpi.
For estimation of the depth resolution we scanned a paper print with
black and white stripes (0.25 mm wide). The strip was folded at the angle
of 90 degrees and the resultant isosceles triangle was put int the scanner.
It's clear that the sharpness edge visible on the scan (measured from the
triangle's edge) equals the depth resolution.

Strip's fragment. 3200 dpi. The printer's dots are well seen.

|
The depth resolution for scanner's window's center is
24 mm |

|
The depth resolution for scanner's window's edge is
14 mm (minimal) |
So, for the frame's center and the blur ring of 0.25 mm the depth resolution
is 24 mm and for 1/2000" (or 0.013 mm) it's close to 1.2 mm. In the glassless
frame it is close to possible distortions.
The specified dynamic range of 3.4D is really close to this value, and
in case of scanning 11 transparent neutral filters of the density of 2
(overall density of 3.3 D) it's easy to read the writing on the lower filter,
with noise being not great.

When scanning the slides the histogram has a sharp BORDER=1 in the shadows,
but such dynamic range is enough for the negatives developed the standard
way. The EPSON Scan program accuratly turns a negative into a positive.
Here is a smaller copy and fragment 1:1 for the negative's scan for the
Epson (2400 dpi) and Nikon 8000 (4000 dpi):

Reduced shot (35mm nagtive).
Fragment 1:1. Epson on the left, Nikon on the right. The real
slide scanner has a higher resolution and more details in the shadows (in
the light areas on the negative).

Epson Perfection 3200 Photo, 6*9 cm slide. 3200 dpi, 48bit color
depth, 443MB size, scanning time via USB1 - 10 min.

And its fragments 1:1. Without the power stabilizer it can have
color horizontal stripes.

Nikon 8000, 6*9 cm. 4000 dpi, 48bit color depth, 611MB size, scanning
time via IEEE1394 (Firewire) - 6 min.

And its fragments 1:1.
In this case the exposure is long, the Epson's wide slide can replace
even Nikon.
The Epson Perfection 3200 Photo is a good competitor in price and scanning
quality for film solutions. The resolution of 3200 dpi is excessive until
there is glass and focus adjustment is impossible. We compared it with
expensive professional scanner Nikon 8000, and this single fact shows how
high-grade this flastbed model is. Although it has inferior resolution
and no hardware realization of automatic film defects removment, it is
six times cheaper and remains a flatbed solution. And its real resolution
of 1800 - 2000 dpi is enough for ordinary cameras and films.
Specification:
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Scanner type: Flatbed, color
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Photoelectric Device: Color CCD line sensor, 27200
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Scan area: 216 x 297 mm
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Scan resolution: 3200 dpi (basic mode), 6400 dpi with Micro Step technology
(subscanning)
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Scan speed: 14.3 ms/line at 3200 dpi, 4.6 ms/line at 600 dpi
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Color separation: RGB color filters on CCD converters
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File bit capacity: 8/16 bits
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Halftone processing: AAS (Auto Area Segmentation) (you can turn it on/off),
3 halftone modes (A, B and C) and 4 dithering templates (A, B, C and D)
for two-level and four-level data
-
Interface: USB 2.0 (connecting jack of the B type) and IEEE 1394 serial
bus interface
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Light source: White luminiscent lamp with cold cathode
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Slide adapter: 102 x 230 mm, 35mm film, 35mm slides - 2 x 6 shots or 4
framed, 1 frame of 120/220 (6 x 9 cm), 1 shot, 4 x 5 film
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Dimensions: 304*476*122 mm
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Weight: approx. 6 kg
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MCBF: 30,000 cycles