Friday, December 6, 2013

Low Price SVP FS1700 Digital Film Scanner w/ 2.4 Inches Build-in LCD-Black

SVP FS1700 Digital Film Scanner w/ 2.4 Inches Build-in LCD-Black

SVP FS1700 Digital Film Scanner w/ 2.4 Inches Build-in LCD-Black Review


Have you ever thought about how to keep the perfect quality of your old photographs forever? Scanning all the prints too time-consuming and processing the films in a lab too expensive? Then here comes a unique film scanner right for you: SVP FS1700is a innovative standalone film scanner that instantly converts 35mm film negatives and slides into digital images without the need for a computer or application software. Now you can preserve all their photo memories by turning the millions of photographs now stored on slides and negatives into digital images to preserve them forever. We have created a very simple-to-use device that works right out of the box and produces a five-megapixel digital image in five seconds at a push of a button. The device features a 5mpix scanning chip (i.e. 2592x1680 pixels, 3600 dpi) producing the images large enough to be printed on a A4 page! Unlike similar devices currently on the market, the SVP fs1700 does not require a computer or learning a new software program, and it takes very little space to operate, store or transport.The SVP FS 1700 is uniquely designed with a built-in color LCD screen for viewing and editing, and a memory card reader that saves the converted images directly onto SD memory cards. Within seconds, users can view their scanned photos through a digital picture frame or upload to a computer. It's designed to be used right out of the box by simply plugging it into an AC outlet.


Price :
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SVP FS1700 Digital Film Scanner w/ 2.4 Inches Build-in LCD-Black Feature


  • Converts all 35mm color / monochrome negatives and mounted slides to digital at the touch of a button
  • 5 Mega Pixel Stand-alone Film Scanner, no computer or software required to operate
  • Built-in 2.4-inch color LCD screen to view and edit images
  • Saves images directly on SD memory cards via embedded SD/MMC card slot; Package includes a image editing software CD((Compatible with Operating system Windows XP/Vista).
  • Supporting Preview, Playback, and Editing Function.






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Costumer review

32 of 32 people found the following review helpful.
5Works great
By Christopher Baier
I have been waiting years for an affordable way to scan my parents 2000+ slides. The slides have been sitting in a big box in my house for years. The projector bulb on the 1960s era slide projector is burned out so we haven't seen the slides in 10+ years. I doubted the quality of such an inexpensive scanner, but once I tried it, it gave good results. One caveat, I have some slides that are in aluminum frames (my dad used to develop his own slides) and they wouldn't work in the scanner, since the frame for scanning is designed for paper slides. But I was able to remove the slides and scan them in the film frame.

The scanning was really easy. Press a button to preview and another button to scan. It takes an SD memory card (or connects to a computer), so I stuck in an SD card, and scanned while I watched TV. Scanning each slide literally took less than 2 seconds.

Tips:

There were several trays of slides that didn't get saved to the SD card, it may have been that the memory card was not inserted properly. So I had to rescan those. I would scan 5 or 6 trays, then copy them to my computer. That way if a batch was bad, I only had to rescan those 5 or 6 trays. But I scanned 2000 slides and this only happened once, so I think it was just user error.

Since I was scanning thousands of slides, separated into trays of 30 slides (some had less than 30) I found a couple of blank slides and would write the tray number on it with a black Sharpie and scan that as a divider, so I could easily sort the scanned slides into folders.

Once you delete the old scans from the SD card, the new scans will start being named/numbered from the beginning again (Scan001, Scan002, etc.) so you have to be careful when copying them to your computer so you don't overwrite the old scans. So once I copied the slides to my computer, I would divide them into folders and rename them. (You can do this in batches easily in Windows, or on a Mac with an AppleScript: Replace Text in Item Names).

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
4Impressive scans
By N. Lo
Amateur photographer wanted to digitize negatives to store in case the negatives get damaged. It was very simple to use and my computer (HP laptop w/Vista) recognized it without loading the program disc. I was also able to scan my dad's slides with ease. I did not use a SD card so on board memory was small. I was able to do 10 scans then transfer it to my computer via usb cord. Not sure what the confusion was on previous comment. I barely read the instructions. If I couldnt figure out what the icon was, then I used the manual as reference. When I first got it I did think it was automated, load the negative & it would scan each frame until the end of the cartridge. Its not, its manually moving from one frame to another, click the capture button on each frame.

8 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
5SVP FS1700 Black Digital Film Scanner
By Eugenio
The conversion from photo slides to digital images was fast and easy. The image quality is as good as the slide image.

2 comments:

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