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Scanner
I went to Office Depot today,and asked to see scanners,
with the CCD element. He didn't know what I was talking about. He even looked it up on his "Hand Held"device? He's been in that department,quite a while. When I walked in,it looked like "Nerdville". But I guess not? |
It is surprisingly difficult to sometimes find that information. Even when looking at the scanner specs. One easy way to tell is to find a scanner that is made to scan negatives or film slides. They need the CCD to scan the depth of the slides correctly.
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There's a reason why they're working at Office Depot
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scanners
Thank you all,for your help.
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I don't think the staff at places like Office Depot have much cause to know a lot about scanners anymore - they aren't as popular / necessary for pictures and things like that as they were 20 years ago. My local Office Depot had a pretty poor selection, I actually wound up ordering the one I wanted (an Epson v370) off of Amazon.
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I posted this last month in another thread. It may be helpful here. Also see this thread for more suggestions:
As of 9/23/2019, I just checked the Canon site and it appears they no longer make the Canoscan 5600F, the 9000F, or the 9000F Mark II. It looks like Canon only makes LiDE scanners which do not work well with slabbed cards. You can find one 9000F and one 9000F Mark II on Amazon right now, but they are ridiculously overpriced. For us card geeks, the Epson V series may be the only good option, other than finding a used Canon on eBay. |
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I purchased my Canoscan 5600F after the release of the 9000F and it was ridiculously underpriced. |
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Incredulous! Ludicrous! heh :cool: |
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My Canoscan 8400F is older than Queen Elizabeth, but it still gives me very nice scans. I'm not suggesting you get that one, because, again, it's older than the Queen of England. But Canon, with their Canoscan line, has had a really nice run of putting out scanners with remarkable quality and durability.
This was scanned over 5 years ago with the 8400F. It has the CCD element, so whatever graded card you might get, a PSA, SGC or a Beckett, it can handle it without any drop in quality because of slab depth. http://net54baseball.com/picture.php...ictureid=15994 I'm going to get back into collecting baseball cards again here pretty soon, and when I upgrade my scanner, it will be another Canon. |
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The more skill the store personnel have the more they make per hour in turn leads to higher cost items. The ROI for that expertise probably isn't good.
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Just get a CanoScan and call it a day. 5600F, 8800F, 9000F etc.
:cool::cool::cool: |
Scanners
I have an "Envy"5055 (scanner-printer).It usually takes terrible scans,of graded
cards.So,I bought an "Epson 370",so I can scan the graded cards. The "370" has no printer,as you know, If I still want to print,can I hook them together,in tandem?(lack of a better word) Or,do I have to plug them in,one at a time? Thanks, "No Tech Ben" again |
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