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If using the bellows, yes; 1 for the lens and 1 for the camera.Do you need adapters for different mounts?
You can find the manual for the 3 / 3C (the commonest models, I believe) here...
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If using the bellows, yes; 1 for the lens and 1 for the camera.Do you need adapters for different mounts?
I have a Plustek 7500i, running it on a M1 MacBook Pro under Vuescan Pro. The original version of Silverfast that came with it stopped working aeons ago; I could upgrade just the one scanner to SF 9, or for about the same money buy Vuescan Pro for any scanner (I also have an Epson V500 and an all-in-one printer/scanner or two). AFAIK you'd need one or the other of these (SF or VP) to run a 7000 series scanner on modern Macs; not sure what the story is in Window-land.I'm looking at Plustek's, some 7xxx series and some 8xxx series. Obvs the higher the number the newer the model but does anyone know, will I have any trouble running the older ones/any of them on a modern laptop with windows 11? It looks like they all have a standard usb cable for connection so should be pretty straight forward to get them chooching right?
With most of the Plusteks (or Epsons) you have to load the film holder first (you'll get better at this!). With most of the Plusteks you have to manually move the film holder for each new frame, and then fine tune the crop. A preview takes a few seconds (mine is at 900 samples per inch), then I do a two scan multi-scan at 3600 spi. I used to scan at 2400 spi but since that's not a native resolution, you're relying on Vuescan to do the interpolation.Hmmm, might be changing my mind having read how slow Plusteks are. Should be faster doing B&W but maybe I'd be better spending time refining my DSLR scanning routine as I'm sure that it should be possible to batch crop in lightroom right?
ThanksIf using the bellows, yes; 1 for the lens and 1 for the camera.
You can find the manual for the 3 / 3C (the commonest models, I believe) here...
I probably spend around 1-2 hours per roll of 135 film,
