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Epson Perfection V700 Photo

Epson Perfection V700 Photo

Product summary

The goodThe good: Speedy; full-featured hardware and software; FireWire and USB 2.0 connections.

The badThe bad: No automatic document feeder option; large; a bit loud; driver has some annoying interface quirks; frequently pauses in midscan to warm up.

The bottom lineThe bottom line: The Epson Perfection V700 Photo makes an excellent choice for a deep-pocketed photo hobbyist or a pro who needs to scan originals in a mixture of sizes.

Specifications: Type: Flatbed scanner - Desktop; Optical Resolution: 6400 dpi x 9600 dpi; Scanner interface type: IEEE 1394 (FireWire); See full specs

Price range: $415.00 - $593.99

CNET editors' review

  • Reviewed on: 10/12/2006
  • Released on: 03/17/2006
"I'm sitting on 1,000 slides. What's the best way to get them into the computer?" is a frequently asked question I get from both friends and readers. Of course, the easiest solution is to send them off to someone else. But that can get expensive, and many people don't want to subject their prized photos to the disinterested hands of a technician. That leaves you with a scanner as your only option. For speedy, unattended scanning, a dedicated slide scanner with an automatic feeder, such as the Nikon Coolscan V, is a good bet. After you're done with the slides, though, it becomes an expensive paperweight. So after the costs and benefits play out, your best overall choice turns out to be a really good flatbed scanner--like the Epson Perfection V700.

The V700 improves upon its popular predecessor, the Perfection 4990 Pro, not to mention that it beats that model's price by about $50. You might also notice, however, that its design radically differs from last year's models; a switch from all rounded curves to sharp angles and corners. I happen to prefer the flat-topped version, because every large object on my desk must be able to hold a pile of something or other. Speaking of which, you'll need to allocate a big chunk of desk space for the V700: 6 by 12 by 20 inches.

Epson includes a variety of carriers in the box: one holds 12 slides, another four six-frame film strips, one for two 4x5 transparencies, and one for eight medium-format frames. They're all well designed and easy to load, and they each snap into a notch to lock in place on the scanbed. My biggest problem with the myriad mounts is finding places to put them. A version of the V700, the V750-M Pro, also offers a liquid mount, as used by drum scanners. This allows the film to press directly against the glass, which maximizes sharpness and minimizes artifacts. Though the V700 doesn't supply this, it does use separate lenses for reflective (hard-copy) and transmissive (slides and negatives) originals; since the latter generally need to be optically enlarged far more than the former, the lenses need to be optimized differently. One lens is designed for optimum resolving at a horizontal resolution of 4,800dpi, the other, 6,400dpi. Of course, the scanner can interpolate way beyond that, and for small originals, you generally find yourself in interpolation territory.


Click here for more on the V700's feature set and scan quality.

I had no problem surrendering precious desk space to the V700 and tend to use it for everyday jobs as well as digitizing the family slides. I most often use its scan-to-PDF function, which always operates seamlessly. You can use the button on the front of the scanner to launch the operation. My one big gripe here is the lack of an automatic document feeder (ADF) option, as if the thought of common office tasks were beneath the notice of such a high-class product.

Scanning can be as slow or fast as you make it. Two slides, using autoexposure and unsharp masking on medium, scanned at 48-bit color and 9,600dpi--a pretty typical job--takes only about 44 seconds. There's some overhead, however: it takes about 44 seconds for the scanner to warm up, and oddly, it pauses to warm up in the middle of scans--or at least it claims to be doing so. If you load on the works, such as turning on Digital ICE postprocessing at its highest quality, a single slide can take as long as nearly 11 minutes. Keep in mind that these are on my oh-so-real-world work system, a 2.4GHz P4 with 1.25GB RAM, via the FireWire connection. Your mileage may vary.

Overall, the scan quality was excellent across a variety of reflective and positive originals. (Test negatives were unavailable at the time this review was written. When our film scanning tests are completed, that information will be added to this review.) It produces scans with a broad dynamic range, decent color accuracy, relatively neutral grays, and sharp line art. It even managed to produce printable photos from some 50-odd-year-old Minox slides, tiny 8mm-by-11mm originals. The color restoration isn't terribly accurate, but the scans are pleasing, and if you have only light damage to your photos, the automatic tools should suffice.

The $549 price tag may seem a bit steep to a market used to sub-$100 models and everything-to-everyone multifunctions, but a good slide scan still requires an excellent optical system and a low-noise sensor. Furthermore, the Epson Perfection V700 Photo is completely sealed for a dust-free inside. Serious pros with thousands of slides may still be better served by a dedicated slide scanner with a batch feeder, but most of us can probably be happy with this multipurpose maven.

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Where to buy

Epson Perfection V700 Photo: $415.00 - $593.99
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Dell Small Business
$549.99 Yes 5.0 star rating
Buydig.com
$494.97 Yes 5.0 star rating
TigerDirect.com
$499.99 Yes 5.0 star rating
Circuit City
$529.99 Yes 5.0 star rating
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Reviews from around the Web

  • photographypress.co.uk

    Editors' rating: 90

    Summary: Despite its unattractive blockiness, it is a corker, performing well and able to deliver stunning scans quickly and simply

    Read full review

  • digitalartsonline.co.uk

    Editors' rating: 80

    Summary: Pro photographers will want to wait for the ?465 plus VAT Perfection V750 Pro, which adds a high-pass optics system, the full Ai version of SilverFast, and calibration software. However, the V700 is perfect for most designers

    Read full review

  • macworld.com

    Editors' rating: 80

    Summary: The silver and black V700 scanner is a few inches taller than most desktop, flatbed scanners, and it has a boxy, angular design when compared to the rounded corners of most scanners. It can connect to your Mac via USB 2.0 or FireWire, but we used FireWire

    Read full review

  • pocket-lint.co.uk

    Editors' rating: 90

    Summary: The Epson Perfection V750 Pro follows from Epson's V700 model offering an even more complete professional package

    Read full review

  • pcmag.com

    Editors' rating: 80

    Summary: Aiming to attract serious amateur photographers, the Epson Perfection V700 has comprehensive options for handling film and produces top-quality scans.

    Read full review

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