Epson v600 vs v800 Because the holder only has one strip that can hold three 6x6s, it can also accommodate two 6x7s. Probably two 6x9s if the spacing between frames isn't too great. In comparison to the V700, I prefer the V800's redesign of all film holding (I use them all). They handle half as much film (one medium format strip instead of two; one 4x5 instead of two), but are noticeably tougher, lock better, and include a clear plastic layer to keep film level. I recommend this scanner and holders as a very decent prosumer level film scanner.
I'm using it right now, and it takes about 3-4 minutes each 35mm frame at 2400 DPI with Digital ICE enabled. At this level, shooting 10 frames takes about 20 minutes. This does not include the time it takes me to assess the images first, then adjust the exposure settings for each one to achieve the best results; this usually takes another 5-15 minutes. The scanner can only hold two 6-frame chunks of 35mm film at a time. It takes me around 1-2 hours to develop and scan each roll of 35mm film with this scanner. If you just want quick photos and don't want to change anything, it can scan 10 frames at 300DPI in about 8 minutes with full auto settings and no ICE.
The scanner's USB connection is the slowest, however my i7 3200ghz 2nd generation computer with 16GB RAM functioned beautifully. Then I moved it to my current computer, which has an i7 6400ghz processor, 1TB SSD, 16GB RipJaws DDR4 RAM, and a GTX 1050ti 4GB DDR5 graphics card. A high-end gaming machine three years ago. 4-5 negatives stored at 2 GB each are worth more than a 35-year-old negative as source imagery. Prior to digital photography, I used a vintage Minolta autofocus camera from 1992 to shoot 35mm film. The sheer volume of digital images I've lost since switching to digital, as well as the learning curve, is amusing, but here I am, decades later, with every photograph I took while serving in the Navy. In some ways, I imagine a day when Since your digital images can no longer be converted to jpg, your memories as you reach your senior years will be just that: recollections.
Complete any task quickly: scan, copy, scan to email, and create PDFs in seconds with four configurable buttons. Follow these techniques to eliminate the appearance of tears and creases in photographs: For digital printing, use ICE. Take your photography to the next level: PhotoStudio from ArcSoft is provided to help you edit and improve your digital photos.