Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/01/26
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]McIntosh, Red Delicious, Jonathan, Criterion, Valencias, Gravenstein which one is the best? This a trick question which requires a sharp mind as you'd have to know in this list of apples the Valencias don't belong. A Valencias in an orange not a apple! In every basket of apples there's a Valencia Orange? Never seen it happen. In every basket of apples a bad apple you'll dig up but an orange no, Here I am getting all excited but this 4990 is the orange in a basket of scanner apples! A favorite saying on the lug over the years... Apples and oranges, The 4990 is a flat bed. If all you did is medium format, panoramic and or sheet film it would be a just the thing. But this is more of a Focomat group. We'd never let Brownie film in our house! Not gritty enough! People aren't going to recommend a flat bed for hardcore 35mm users, They are not doesn't and don't have the specs for that. It would be going up to Johnny Appleseed and handing him an orange. Having a person in the crowd in a Miller Beer Ad drinking a glass of red wine. Unless all your ever making is very low rez images like 4x6s or web pix from your Leica and never a thought of a letter sized inkjet on good paper and most of what you scan is big stuff. Film or paper based. Paper based as in prints,. All the photographers I know use Nikon scanners. Even the Canon shooters who you'd think would only use the word "Nikon" in vain. I love the Epson company but when it comes to scanners id just as soon blow my nose in a Scotty instead of a Kleenex than go to strangers in the scanner department. You're just asking for trouble before you even start. Its like "What's wrong with my car!!?" "Its a Ford!" (does not represent the personal opinion of this email person) Mark Rabiner Photography Portland Oregon http://rabinergroup.com/