Epson Perfection V300 Photo Color Scanner (Black) Reviews

Epson Perfection V300 Photo Color Scanner (Black)

Epson Perfection V300 Photo Color Scanner (Black)

  • 4800 x 9600 dpi optical resolution
  • Scan 35mm film ó built-in Transparency Unit
  • Beautiful enlargements up to 13 x 19 from film
  • Advanced Digital Dust Correction
  • One-touch photo restoration

Scanner, Epson ,Perfection V300

List Price: $ 139.00

Price: $ 79.99

CUTLER HAMMER E51KT233 GLASS FIBER OPTIC SCANNER CABLE
US $74.90
End Date: Sunday May-20-2012 11:06:00 PDT
Buy It Now for only: US $74.90
Buy it now | Add to watch list
SICK CLV490-0010 Optic Barcode Scanner
US $1,350.00
End Date: Sunday May-20-2012 11:50:40 PDT
Buy It Now for only: US $1,350.00
Buy it now | Add to watch list
Be Sociable, Share!

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

3 Comments »

 
  • W. Crews Giles says:
    385 of 392 people found the following review helpful:
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    Epson V300 Scanner, July 16, 2009
    By 
    W. Crews Giles (Texas) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Epson Perfection V300 Photo Color Scanner (Black) (Office Product)

    Epson V300 Photo

    RATING
    I can only give five stars when I have a comparison with my use of another scanner–but I strongly suspect such a comparison would not change my opinion of this one. I am delighted, and it exceeds all my expectations. Therefore, four stars and probably five.

    USES
    I had two purposes for a scanner: My primary function is to preserve long out of print and often rare history and theological texts, making them available to other scholars and researchers– thus, it had to be a flatbed. The second was to preserve and share old photos.

    Twenty four hours ago I purchased this unit, led to this choice by reviews, and finally deciding based upon the LED scanning technology, the portability, the price and the bundled software. It cost me twenty dollars more (one hundred total) for the V300 which I believe is the same as the V30 except the V300 has the inclusion of the 35mm film and slide holding frame which I think could be of use to me.

    MODES
    I don’t know why they use the terms they do for the modes of use. They ought to be: Photo mode, Text mode, Auto mode and Professional mode. Instead, Photo is called “Home”, Text is called, “Office”, Auto and Professional are what you would think. The menus are otherwise intuitive, but you can (as I did) read the manual if you want.

    PHOTOS
    I started with photos. 300 dpi resolution is sufficient for all of my needs, but I tried 1200 to see what it would do. Using 1200 is 400% of original, and using that setting, and zooming in using common photo software, the detail was far beyond my expectations–almost like a crime movie zooming in on the subject’s glasses to see the reflection of the photographer. Almost. This is well beyond my needs, as I am preserving photos as they are– not photoshopping for improvements. Yet…

    RESTORATION
    I could not resist trying the automatic restoration. I began with the default setting of 300 dpi, which I will use across the board from now on–simply because it is more than adequate for my uses. I have a black and white family photo from the 1890′s, and I had to view the original under bright light to make out any detail, so faded was it. Seconds later, the preview image in “Home” mode” (see above) and leaving the default for “color photo,” showed a perfectly balanced contrast, popping out detail my eye could not detect in the original. Excellent.

    I then took a 1941 color portrait, and left the settings in “Home Mode” 300 dpi, and “color restoration” checked. The original’s color was skewed, almost no red remaining. A push of the button and the image burst out in what I believe must have been the original colors. Excellent.

    The last photo test was of a snapshot of me in which the flash had made my skin appear pasty white, while I was actually quite tan. I used the Professional Mode and played with the controls removing a bit of red, removing green on the intuitive graph display for that purpose, and playing with the other controls for few seconds resulting in a very good final product.

    TEXT
    Scanning whole books into pdf files is my main use. But I tested more than that.

    OLD NEWSPAPWER CLIPPING
    My first test was actually a ninety year old newspaper clipping. Using “Office” mode, I did nothing but preview and then scan. The software did its thing and perhaps a minute later I had opened the pdf document using acrobat (the free version) and the image was an exact replica. I used the text select tool in Acrobat to select the entire article and then pasted it into MS Word. The supplied OCR software (ABBYY FineReader Sprint Plus) had done a fair job for a free bundled product and a terrible ink speckled original (like all newspaper print in hose days). The pdf file was perfectly readable as it was. The ability to search ad find specific words and phrases would be easily seen in the version of what I copied from the pdf file and then pasted into Word. The result was good enough to make sense to my eye and brain to read it, but the ink speckle from the original showed up as various characters, and quite a few “are enn” showed as “emm” as well many other common OCR scanning errors. It was along way from being usable for citing directly–perhaps ten minutes of clean-up for that one full column of news print.

    My second test was also old newspaper but well preserved in a scrap book. There were four items on the page I tested, and in “Office” mode, I simply selected the four parts of the page that included the actual clippings in the preview pane (the selection is easy, fast and called a “marquee.” I would call it a “cropping selection tool.” Then I clicked all, and all four boxes surrounding the four clippings were selected. Next, I selected pdf as the output file type from the file-folder icon on the main window, and then…

    Read more

    Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No

  • fatmav says:
    422 of 434 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    great home scanner, November 25, 2008
    By 
    fatmav
    (VINE VOICE)
      

    This review is from: Epson Perfection V300 Photo Color Scanner (Black) (Office Product)
    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What’s this?)

    Over the years I have been through several scanners both at work and at home. This Epson V300 is the latest home scanner for me.

    Speed: Back then a high resolution scanner was like 600dpi and required a SCSI connection in order to transfer that amount of information in reasonable amount of time. Thankfully, these days USB2 is ubiquitous and relatively high speed, so the bottleneck is really no longer at the connection nor the scanner. Instead, I found that I am usually CPU bounded because of all the image processing that happens *after* the data has been transfered to my computer. After all, 4800x9600dpi is a lot of information to go through. So yes, it can give you a slow scanning experience, but it’s not the scanner’s problem at all. I also note this scanner use an LED lighting source, the warmup time is about three seconds. This is much shorter than the older CFL scanners that can take a minute or two to warm up.

    Scanning quality: This is top-notch, especially given the price. I’ve seen results from much more expensive scanners including an high-end scanner from HP. At 1200dpi, which is a common setting for my workflow, I don’t detect any material differences in the images, which is a good sign. If anything, the tiny difference is in the optical performance, most likely due to the coating on the glass that separates the document and the sensor. In particular, I do see a bit more chromatic aberration. However, this is something that can be corrected in software and I believe it is present in all scanners.

    Software: Having been an HP user for so long, I find the Epson Scan utility to be adequate and I actually like it better than HP’s offering. It has all the features that I expect. Note that I did not install the other two included softwares—”Arcsoft MediaImpression” and “ABBYY Fine Reader Spring Plus OCR”. The former I have no interest, the second one is a lite version of ABBYY’s commercial OCR product. I happen to have another OCR solution at my disposal and so I skipped this up-sell offering as well. Note that I am a Windows user and so I can’t speak for the Mac side of the story.

    Overall, I am positively impressed with this scanner. If this is your first scanner, I don’t see anything that can go wrong.

    Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No

  • Kevin Nicholls "jaded, aging hipster" says:
    191 of 198 people found the following review helpful:
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    Say goodbye to “Scanner Warming Up”!, December 17, 2008
    By 
    Kevin Nicholls “jaded, aging hipster” (Milford, MI) –
    (TOP 500 REVIEWER)
      
    (VINE VOICE)
      
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Epson Perfection V300 Photo Color Scanner (Black) (Office Product)
    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What’s this?)

    Coming from an (admittedly older) Canon LIDE scanner and the scanner in my Canon Pixma MX850 Office All-In-One Printer, LED scanning isn’t whiz-bang new technology to me. And frankly, I wasn’t expecting to put either scanner out to pasture.

    But Epson has proven me wrong with the V300.

    One of the biggest pains in scanning images for me, has been waiting for the scanner to warm up, and for the driver to accept that the scanner is warmed up and actually let me scan something. With the V300, you tell it to scan, and it just does. I can’t stress how surprised I was to find how such a relatively minor thing made scanning seem like less of a chore.

    The quality is excellent, too. Admittedly, my previous scanners were designed with basic home use in mind, however, there really is a noticeable difference in quality, even when I did side-by-side comparisons at the same resolutions.

    Getting the scanner to work with my Mac wasn’t a problem, either. Pop in the disc, run the installer, and connect the scanner. Next thing I knew, Photoshop CS3 was ready to use it. One thing I really have to say here, is that Epson’s scanner drivers blow Canon’s out of the water, if you ever pay attention to your Mac’s log files. The Epson driver isn’t constantly spawning messages to the syslog (or just plain breaking) if you use the scanner on a single computer with multiple users logged in.

    The only downside with this (or really any other consumer-grade scanner) is that high-res scans take quite a while. Not quite “go to another room and make yourself breakfast” slow, but you certainly have time to go get yourself a cup of coffee while you wait for an 8×10″ photo to scan at high-res. However, the quality of the scan makes the wait worthwhile.

    At this price, and with this kind of speed and quality, you really can’t go wrong.

    Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No

 

Leave a Reply

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>