Brand | Epson |
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Manufacturer | Epson |
Model | B11B198032 |
Model Name | EPSB11B198011 |
Model year | 2009 |
Part Number | B11B198032 |
Scanner Resolution | 4800 |
Has Greyscale | 16 bits |
Light Source Type | LED |
Number of Items | 1 |
Wattage | 16.5 watts |
Batteries included | No |
Batteries Required | No |
Connector Type | USB |
Media Type | Photo |
Manufacturer | Epson |
Item model number | B11B198032 |
Product Dimensions | 48.49 x 27.99 x 11.81 cm; 4 kg |
ASIN | B006WZL7OA |
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Epson Perfection V600 Photo - Flatbed Scanner
Purchase options and add-ons
Media type | Photo |
Scanner type | Photo |
Brand | Epson |
Model name | EPSB11B198011 |
Connectivity technology | USB |
Resolution | 4800 |
Item weight | 4 kg |
Wattage | 16.5 watts |
Sheet size | Legal |
Standard sheet capacity | 1 |
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Product information
Technical Details
Additional Information
Date First Available | Jan. 22 2014 |
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Customer Reviews |
4.2 out of 5 stars |
鶹 Rank |
|
Is discontinued by manufacturer | No |
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Product description
Epson Perfection V600 Flatbed scanner This Epson Perfection V600 home photo scanner features USB 2.0 connectivity and comes complete with film holders for scanning prints, negatives and slides, including 35mm film strips, mounted slides and full panoramic medium format film. The advanced DIGITAL ICE technology removes dust and scratches to restore photos and film for high quality scans at 6400dpi optical resolution with Epson Matrix CCD technology.
Top Brand: Epson
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Price | $850.00$850.00 | -18%$89.99$89.99 List: $109.99 | $309.99$309.99 | $99.99$99.99 | $749.00$749.00 | $279.99$279.99 |
Delivery | Get it Jul 11 - 23 | Get it by Wednesday, Jul 2 | Get it by Wednesday, Jul 2 | Get it by Wednesday, Jul 2 | Get it by Wednesday, Jul 2 | Get it by Wednesday, Jul 2 |
Customer ratings | ||||||
Sold by | Advanced-Printers | 鶹.ca | Canadian Shoppe | 鶹.ca | Plustek Estore | Plustek Estore |
scanner type | Photo | Photo, Document | Film | Document | Film | Photo |
sheet capacity | 1 | 1 | 100 | 100 | — | 1 |
paper size | Legal | Letter | Legal | A4 | — | A4, Letter |
connectivity tech | USB | USB | USB | USB | infrared | USB |
optical sensor tech | CCD | CIS | CMOS | CIS or CCD or CMOS | CMOS | CCD |
media type | Photo | Photo, Paper | Negatives, Slide, Photo | Photo | Negatives, Slide | USB |
resolution | 4800 | 4800 | 3200 | 4800 | 7200 | 600 |
light source type | LED | LED | — | LED | — | LED |
grey scale depth | 16 bits | 48-bits per pixel (internal); 24-bits per pixel (external) | — | 16-bit Internal / 8-bit External | — | — |
colour depth | — | 48-bits per pixel (internal); 24-bits per pixel (external) | — | 48 bpp | — | 24 |
min. system requirement | Windows 7 | Windows 8 | — | Windows 7, Windows 10, Windows 8, Mac OS X v10.105, macOS v10.13 (High Sierra), Linux (with ScanGear MP driver installed) | Windows 7 | Windows 7 |
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Customer reviews
Top reviews from Canada
Top reviews from other countries
- JonathanReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 26, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent flatbed for what I need
Verified PurchaseI am using this scanner mostly for old photographs (some dating late 1800s) and negatives (going back to 1909) through to the 1970s.
It is excellent for both. The only limitation has been with large, very high resolution negatives. It has struggled with one or two of these, but it has been unusual.
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JrReviewed in Spain on September 13, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars su facil manejo
Verified Purchaselas fotografias quedan geniales en alta resolicion
- Uffe NReviewed in Germany on April 5, 2019
3.0 out of 5 stars Works with Linux
Verified PurchaseMy primary concern when buying any computer hardware is whether or not it will work with Linux. This is because i have used Linux (openSuse) exclusively for the past 10+ years, and have no intention of using anything else (read Windows/Mac). Keep this in mind when reading the rest of my review.
Delivery and packaging:
I found the packaging adequate. The outside box had received some blows in transit, but these had not affected the inner box. The package was delivered to me on the second day of the delivery window, so I see no reason to complain.
The hardware itself:
it works as expected, and I cannot fault it. I have not tried using the transparency function yet (ie scanning negatives and slides), but have noticed that the lamp for this does not cover the entire glass of the scanner. I get the impression you can only scan a few slides/negatives at a time. On the other hand, the holder for negatives/slides is meant to position your negatives/slides under the lamp, and hold them there while scanning, so I don't know if you would need a bigger lamp.
The software:
the necessary files are not included on the CD, as a Linux user you have to download them from Epson's web site. And when you do, you can run into the problem that the installation script does not work, it didn't for me. This was not a major problem, I have installed RPMs manually before, but for a beginner it might be off-putting. I did not have to install anything other than the files provided by Epson to get the scanner to work.
As for the scanning process itself, it works for me. I am scanning several hundred of my mothers pictures, to enter into my computer as much information as she can remember about each picture. preferably I would be done before she dies... Because of this, a smooth workflow is important to me. And Epson have succeeded, in part.
I can set up the software to scan a picture every time I press the "Start" button on the scanner (I have only tried using the button farthest to the right, I don't know about the others), and this works: put a picture in, press the button, wait ten seconds, change the picture, press the button, wait ten seconds..... This way it takes some 10-15 seconds per picture, after setting things up.
But there are three shortfalls in the software, in my opinion.
Firstly, living in Sweden, using the Swedish alphabets "strange" letters (åäö) is second nature to me, and could be nice when handling files in a computer. When it comes to photographs, being able to name a folder by eg the town from which the pictures come, would be practical. But Epson's software cannot handle folders with any letters outside the English alphabet! If mum has a bunch of pictures from eg Göteborg (the Swedish name for the city known in English as Gothemburg) I have to name the folder "Goteborg" in order to have scanned pictures saved into it. This is one thing I really on't understand, sine the operating system itself can handle these "strange" letters with no problem at all. In fact, although I use a standard Swedish keyboard, I can name files and folders using eg the Russian alphabet, and to the operating system they are just another file. Why is Epson's software different?
Secondly, I find the choice of file formats a bit restricted. I can choose PCX, PNM, TIFF and PDF. In the list of file formats I can choose from there is also JPG and PNG, but they are greyed out and I cannot choose them. Why? Surely it can't be so difficult to have the software convert from the scanners native format to JPG or PNG.
Lastly, one thing that would come in handy if I were to scan a lot of slides/negtives (I might some time in the future, I have some 4500 slides of my own...) is the ability to scan several parts of what is in the scanner and have each part made into a separate file. Imagine filling the slide holder with four slides, and having to scan all four into one file, and then using Photoshop (or similar) to chop this one file into four... Heaps of work, which could have been avoided if the software would let me scan separate parts into separate files. Maybe the Windows version of Epson's software will do this, but I haven't tried it. What I do know is that I have not found any way of doing it with the Linux version of Epson's software.
The option of scanning one slide at a time is practical only with a very small number of slides, but as an amateur photographer I do not have a small number of slides.
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To sum up: good hardware that is rather let down by the software.
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A small addition to the above, written after scanning some 1500+ pictures:
when scanning straight to a file, you have to decide where to save the file(s) and what to call them. Setting a name (and number series) is no problem, but every single time I start the process, the default location for the file(s) reverts to /home/USERNAME/. I have not found any way of changing this, despite having scanned 1500+ pictures into /home/USERNAME/pictures/mums_pictures . When you have to set this after every roll of film (and there have been close to 100 of them...) it gets very irritating, for no good reason! Being able to set a default location to save the pictures to should not be a major software obstacle. The same goes for other settings: they all revert to some "factory default" every time you start the program. And I change the scan density and turn off the Unsharp Mask option every single time I turn the program on.... It gets irritating, for no good reason...
Another update, in November 2020:
since last using the scanner over a year ago, I had to reinstall my operating system due to a crashed hard drive. And after that, the only software I can get to communicate with the scanner is Epson's own software, which is so laughably bad it looks like it was put together by a bunch of computer science students as a one-term project at university.
I cant scan anything other than pictures on paper (is no slides or other transparent things), and the program is so hard to use I gave up and bought a cheap second hand laptop with Windows on it just to see if the software was a bad on Windows. It wasn't: it's unbelievably better! I haven't had a chance to give this setup a thorough testing, but it seems to have everything I lacked in Linux! Shame on you, Epson!!
Just for the record: before the HD crash, I was using openSuse Tumbleweed, and since the new install I am using openSuse Leap, which is considered a stable version, whereas Tumbleweed is "bleeding edge".
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Juan N.Reviewed in Spain on July 15, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars La facilidad de uso
Verified PurchasePara digitalizar negativos y diapositivas.