Hardware Zone! News and Review > Konica
Konica Minolta Dimage Scan Elite 5400 II

Konica Minolta's Dimage Scan Elite 5400 II
film scanner offers performance and specs that at one time were
available only with considerably higher-priced professional film
scanners, including a maximum optical resolution of 5,400dpi and a
rated optical density of 4.8D. Its ease of use makes it a good
choice for consumers or photographers with libraries of old slides
and negatives, as well as for pros who still shoot film but at
times need to go digital. Unfortunately, the lack of a
high-capacity slide-feeder option limits its usefulness for
higher-volume work.
The off-white scanner is housed in a sleek, durable plastic case
measuring 2.8 by 6.6 by 13.6 inches and weighing 3.3 pounds. It
accepts carriers for 35mm film and slides through its highly
polished black front panel, which is also made of durable plastic.
You can connect to either a Mac or a PC via an included USB 2.0
cable.
Two carriers are available; one accepts four slides, and the other
accepts six-frame filmstrips. Loading originals into the carriers
is easy; they fit snugly and snap shut to prevent any movement
during scanning. Though most film scanners accept film facing
either direction, the 5400 II requires that the film face
emulsion-side down. You push the carrier in just far enough for
the scanner to recognize it's there; the scanner then pulls it in.
The spring-loaded dust door keeps dust and grime from settling on
the scanner's mirrors and lenses when the scanner is idle.
Accumulated dust may never become a problem with the Scan Elite
5400 II, but from our experience, it's helpful to be able to
periodically clean a scanner's mirrors and lenses, especially in
dusty, smoggy environments. The Scan Elite's inner workings aren't
accessible to users.
For the simplest operation, you can either press the Scan button
on the front panel (which starts the Scan Elite's Launcher
application) or run the Launcher from the computer. The company
overhauled the bundled software, which we complained about in our
review of the 5400 II's predecessor, the Dimage Scan Elite 5400,
and added Kodak's Digital ICE4 technology. The software will fit
the needs of most photographers, whether beginners or experienced
pros. The Easy option, meant for first-time users, is a remarkably
good choice for all but the most difficult slides and negatives.
It doesn't require users to tweak any of the optimization
settings, but it does let them select the kinds of optimization
they want. That includes the Pixel Polish option, which automates
the basic brightness, contrast, and saturation settings, and
Kodak's Digital ICE4, a quartet of technologies that remove dust
and scratches, restore faded colors, adjust highlights and
shadows, and reduce grain. All four Kodak applications work very
well, especially the dust-and-scratch removal. Though the manual
says it won't work with Kodachrome, we turned the feature on, ran
some Kodachrome slides through the unit, and came up with good
results. Despite the warning, we turned the feature on, ran some
Kodachrome slides through the unit, and came up with good results.
For serious users, the Utility scanning mode offers the same
capabilities as the Easy option but with nothing automated--you
have to do all the tweaking. While not overwhelming, the
comprehensive list of options meets or beats what we've seen
elsewhere with similarly priced models. Its Jobs and Batch
scanning utilities, for example, automate the scanning of multiple
similar originals, while several interactive histograms make very
precise color or brightness/contrast adjustments a snap. Each
setting worked as expected. In addition to scanning options,
Utility also offers some of the tools of an image-editing
application. These take time to master, even for photographers who
have experience with scanners; however, the manual does a good job
explaining all the scanner's software options, which makes the
process a little easier.
We did, however, find that some tools automatically updated the
proxy window (a screen-resolution preview of image adjustments),
while others required users to press a button. That's not a big
deal, but it lengthened the scanning process for some of the more
complex effects.
As with most scanners, the 5400 II's speed decreases as the scan
resolution and the number of optimization tweaks increases. The
5400 II makes three kinds of scans: index, prescan, and final
scan. Index scans took around seven or eight seconds, no matter
how many images were in the film/slide carriers. Prescans apply
specific adjustments to approximate the effects on the final scan;
times vary depending on the scan resolution and the adjustment
type and intensity.
For this review, we scanned images at 1,350dpi, 1,800dpi,
2,700dpi, and 5,400dpi but didn't apply the tweaks until the final
scan. That increased scanning time a bit but only by the amount of
time the prescans would have taken. With minimal adjustments,
times ranged from 17 seconds at 1,350dpi to about a minute for
5,400dpi. That's what you can expect for the majority of jobs that
don't require a lot of enhancement. Scanning times lengthen with
additional optimization, especially at 5,400dpi. When we added
Digital ROC (restoration of color), an unsharp filter, and Pixel
Polish to the mix, the scanning time jumped to 4 minutes, 50
seconds; it climbed to more than 10 minutes with grain enhancement
and scratch removal included. Fortunately, most slides or
negatives won't need all the options turned on, so scanning
usually won't take that long. On a fairly low-power system, the
scanner worked flawlessly, without hiccups or pauses, even when
burdened with multiple tweaks at the maximum resolution.
As you would imagine, final scan quality depended upon the quality
of the original slide or negative. If correctly exposed with
accurate colors (no distracting tints), the scans ranged from very
good to excellent. Flesh tones, greenery, and the sky all matched
the originals. Poorly exposed originals with noticeable color
casts or obvious fading needed a lot of tweaking, but the final
results usually matched. We had a bit of trouble getting the
maximum densities from underexposed black-and-white negatives;
admittedly, these are the hardest originals for any scanner to
handle, but we were still disappointed, given the scanner's
relatively high optical-density rating.
If you have tons of slides to scan, you're probably better off
with a comparable model that supports a batch feeder, such as the
Nikon Coolscan V; otherwise, the Konica Minolta Dimage Scan Elite
5400 II is a fine choice.
[reference:
cnet.com] [1 January 2006] [back
to hardware]
Popular:

LG CYON-Shine SV420 Mobile Phone

Children's Machine (CM1)

Concept Cell Phones of the Future

Zeiss Ikon SW Superwide Camera

Curon QCOX ; PMP with a wheek key

ROAD HandyPC S101

Kodak EasyShare C875 Digital Camera

Archos 604 (30GB)

ASUS VX1 Lamborghini Notebook

Maxian plans to launch 17mm-thick slim PMP

Asus W6Fp Luxury Notebook

D-Note Digital Note Pad
