Over the last few months I've become dissatisfied with the scans I'm getting from my V550, so in an effort to find out whether it's a problem with me (i.e. unrealistic expectations) or the scanner, I set about trying to find if my scanners optimum scan height was higher/lower than the negative carrier holds the negative.
I spent some time this afternoon cutting out some spacers from a few pieces of thick card measuring 0.45mm thick per sheet. I cut the windows in the card spacers to be slightly larger than the 6x7 neg that I would be scanning, just to ensure that the negative was as flat as possible during scanning. To hold the negative flat and stop and curling or movement I also placed a 6x9 piece of glass on top (pinched from my enlarger).
I started off scanning the film directly against the glass of the scanner, with just the 6x9 piece of glass on top to hold it flat and in place. Next I put the negative on top of a card spacer so that the negative image was lined up with the window, and then placed the glass on top again. I carried on by stacking more spacers on top of each other to give me 0.45mm, 0.90mm, 1.35mm and 1.80mm scans from the glass. I also did a standard scan with the 1mm thick negative carrier that comes with the scanner.
I didn't change any of the scanner settings between scans, only for the first scan to set the image up. I scanned them all at 2400 dpi which is higher than I usually do, and then imported them all into Lightroom, and then Photoshop to crop them. I can tell you now that it's pretty hard to get the angles and crops of all the images the same!
Anyway, I'm not sure what to make of the results. I guess that deep down I was hoping that one of the images would be noticeably sharper than the standard one from the carrier, and that it would solve my problem. However, to my eye they all look fairly similar. I think that the sharpest one is probably number 6, which is the one that was scanned using the standard Epson negative carrier!
Now this leaves me thinking, either I am actually expecting too much from a basic flatbed scanner, which is probably the most likely explanation I can think of, or something isn't quite right with my scanner (less likely).
Hoping to get some opinions as to whether these scans look like what you would personally expect to get from a 6x7 negative scanned on a V550?
(The film was FP4+ developed on Rodinal 1+50, taken on an RB67 back in July 2015, if it makes a difference)
I plan to redo this test again with a different film, and also with a C41 film too, but this is as far as I've got tonight and I'd like to get some input before potentially wasting any more time


The larger version of this is below if you want click to see closer, I don't want to attach a bigger image to the thread if it takes ages to load
https://flic.kr/p/FuJe2u
I spent some time this afternoon cutting out some spacers from a few pieces of thick card measuring 0.45mm thick per sheet. I cut the windows in the card spacers to be slightly larger than the 6x7 neg that I would be scanning, just to ensure that the negative was as flat as possible during scanning. To hold the negative flat and stop and curling or movement I also placed a 6x9 piece of glass on top (pinched from my enlarger).
I started off scanning the film directly against the glass of the scanner, with just the 6x9 piece of glass on top to hold it flat and in place. Next I put the negative on top of a card spacer so that the negative image was lined up with the window, and then placed the glass on top again. I carried on by stacking more spacers on top of each other to give me 0.45mm, 0.90mm, 1.35mm and 1.80mm scans from the glass. I also did a standard scan with the 1mm thick negative carrier that comes with the scanner.
I didn't change any of the scanner settings between scans, only for the first scan to set the image up. I scanned them all at 2400 dpi which is higher than I usually do, and then imported them all into Lightroom, and then Photoshop to crop them. I can tell you now that it's pretty hard to get the angles and crops of all the images the same!
Anyway, I'm not sure what to make of the results. I guess that deep down I was hoping that one of the images would be noticeably sharper than the standard one from the carrier, and that it would solve my problem. However, to my eye they all look fairly similar. I think that the sharpest one is probably number 6, which is the one that was scanned using the standard Epson negative carrier!
Now this leaves me thinking, either I am actually expecting too much from a basic flatbed scanner, which is probably the most likely explanation I can think of, or something isn't quite right with my scanner (less likely).
Hoping to get some opinions as to whether these scans look like what you would personally expect to get from a 6x7 negative scanned on a V550?
(The film was FP4+ developed on Rodinal 1+50, taken on an RB67 back in July 2015, if it makes a difference)
I plan to redo this test again with a different film, and also with a C41 film too, but this is as far as I've got tonight and I'd like to get some input before potentially wasting any more time


The larger version of this is below if you want click to see closer, I don't want to attach a bigger image to the thread if it takes ages to load
https://flic.kr/p/FuJe2u
Last edited:
