Hi everyone, I and my son recently tried scanning a bunch of old 35mm slides on an Epson V600, and were highly disappointed with the results. It claims a resolution up to 6400 x 9600, but for practical purposes (including using a SilverFast USAF 1951 target resolution slide), I found it only capa...
THESE ARE THE PARA ORDNANCE SLIDES THAT REMINGTON BOUGHT WHICH CAN BE USED FOR ANY OF THESE CALIBERS (10MM, .40 S&W, AND .38 SUPER, 9MM, .357 Sig). For 38 super, 9mm, 10mm or .357 sig you can use a 9mm extractor (Or an extractor for that specific caliber). Some minor fitting of the extractor is required to fit to different calibers.
Hey all, What's the best way to insert slides on a Nikon Coolscan 5000 in terms of which side is "up"? I am using this scanner for the first time and don't know whether the emulsion side should be towards or away from the source. The slides I'm using were developed by fuji and thus appear normal ...
What we know is, slides prior to the hard slide tend to crack, which is why we advise not to shoot valuable pistols. All those many thousands of U.S. pistols with replacement slides is the proof.
In scanning mostly Kodachrome slides, I have discovered that you can sometimes recover detail in underexposed areas, but overexposure is usually unrecoverable. Yes, slide film is a lot like digital, especially older digital sensors. With both slide film and a lot of sensors made in the mid-2000s and earlier, once it's gone it's gone.
None of the pairs slides were interchangeable between one another. But I could swap one ECO slide with one CCO slide and the other ECO could be swapped with one of the bobtail slides.