SIGforum
Recommendations for an all-in-one or a flatbed scanner?
December 30, 2019, 10:09 PM
Pipe SmokerRecommendations for an all-in-one or a flatbed scanner?
The Epson V600 would be the
perfect scanner for me. If only it had Wi-Fi connectivity.

Serious about crackers. December 30, 2019, 10:18 PM
parabellumYes, no wireless. Kinda surprised me, but not a deal killer. Just walk the laptop over to it while the thing is taking its sweet time scanning. Alternately, I have an older Win7 latop I could leave setup by it and transfer files from it via a USB thumb drive.
You'd think that with such a feature-laden unit, they'd have it set up for wireless. Maybe they just ran out of room in the case.
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December 30, 2019, 10:42 PM
RipleyA couple thoughts, slow scans may seem like nothing when you get to post-processing. A quality scan can be huge and working with it can be time consuming. I'll guess you're wanting to maximize good images and want good scans.
With that in mind, Winter is the time to do this stuff, even in Georgia, no?

Set the controls for the heart of the Sun. December 30, 2019, 11:50 PM
parabellumYeah, I know when they say slow, they don't mean 90 seconds. Put the document or the slide or negative of photo on the glass, close the lid, start the scan, and come back in a while. How long's a while? A while is a bit. A bit? You know, a bit later.
December 31, 2019, 06:17 AM
Sig2340My HP Laserjet 8650 is a fine 3-in-1.
Nice is overrated
"It's every freedom-loving individual's duty to lie to the government."
Airsoftguy, June 29, 2018
December 31, 2019, 06:30 AM
WoodmanMy bank will do the occasional scan-to-pdf for me. Their scanner is set at the lowest resolution, so my copy zips through. But the quality is about that of a charcoal sketch.
My last experience with scanners, in a desktop publishing course 20 years ago, had a 600dpi scan of an 8.5" x 11" image taking 5+ minutes. At this point, it is easier to take a cellphone photograph and convert it to a pdf, but the file image tends to be huge that way. I have not figured out how to change the data to monochrome.
When I hit the lottery, I'll hire a personal assistant with size 9.5 feet so they can both break in my English loafers and scan in dad's huge collection of 35mm slides.
Dad's piles of carousel slides brings to mind that perfect scene in Mad Men when the Kodak sales pitch was given.
December 31, 2019, 11:51 AM
lizardman_uI have an Epson WF-7520 (I think the newer model is the WF-7620).
I can print up to 13 x 19 inch pages. Scanner warms up quite quickly, doesn't eat a ton of ink.
This can connect wirelessly (how I have it connected) or by a USB cable (not included in the box).
Print quality is great for documents and photos.
Has a document feeder, and will scan double sided pages.
January 01, 2020, 11:59 AM
Pipe Smokerquote:
Originally posted by parabellum:
Yes, no wireless. Kinda surprised me, but not a deal killer. Just walk the laptop over to it while the thing is taking its sweet time scanning. Alternately, I have an older Win7 latop I could leave setup by it and transfer files from it via a USB thumb drive.
You'd think that with such a feature-laden unit, they'd have it set up for wireless. Maybe they just ran out of room in the case.
The purpose of these inexpensive USB->Wi-Fi dongles appears to be to provide Wi-Fi capability for PCs that don’t have it built-in:
www.amazon.com/dp/B008IFXQFU/r..._api_i_AGldEbJ3BZNTCwww.amazon.com/dp/B07P5PRK7J/r..._api_i_3JldEb0EQWVSSBut I wonder if one of them could be plugged into the USB port of the Epson V600 to provide it with a Wi-Fi link, via a router, to a Wi-Fi equipped PC. This link suggests that might be possible:
www.epson.co.uk/viewcon/corpor...nunits/faq/8038/3597BTW – Is the V600 port USB 2 or USB-C?
Serious about crackers. January 01, 2020, 12:27 PM
parabellumNice, but according to the Epson manual for the V600 which I downloaded, this device does not use a USB A-type connector. It uses a USB B-type connector.
That article you linked to is somewhat confusing. It suggests that the V600 does have wireless capability, but I'm not finding this in the manual.
"Epson Scan can be used to scan via a USB connection or using a wired or wireless (Wi-Fi) network connection.
By default Epson Scan is set to scan via a USB cable, and will present an error if Epson Scan is opened and a scanner is connected via a network or Wi-Fi connection.
The following article explains how to change the settings in Epson Scan to allow scanning via a network or Wi-Fi connection."Err...

It's certainly worth a try when I get the scanner but something's not right somewhere in the documentation. If this device
does have wireless functionality, Epson certainly has done a superb job of hiding it.
January 01, 2020, 01:04 PM
RipleyWe have a very low ball Epson XP300 Wi-Fi printer/scanner. It does a surprisingly good job, even using aftermarket ink cartridges. We had a decent dedicated scanner back in Win7 days, it's results were only marginally better than the XP300.
However, Wi-Fi with the PC is so hit or miss, I just use the USB cable from the getgo. Both our Samsung tablets work with Wi-Fi every time.

The menu on your incoming scanner should be at least as useful as any alleged documentation.
Set the controls for the heart of the Sun. January 01, 2020, 08:44 PM
icom706If the 600 is at least as good as the 500 then you'll be a very happy photo scanner.
Picked up the 500 to scan my 35mm collection, a lot of negatives dating back to '75. Also scanned in photos where the negatives were missing or in a bad way. The 500 scans photos very nicely.
Luckily my 13 year old Dell laptop still runs. Tried to get updated SW / drives for the newer mac and windows 10 and no go in recognizing the scanner USB connection. Bummer.
Just scanned a 57 1/2 year old Photo of me at about 6 months of age with my father when he was 21 1/2. Never realized how much my brother looked like him, when I enlarged the photo.
Yes, it is slow - so what? The grim reaper is not that near yet.
WI-FI is overrated. This from one deeply in to a wireless hobby, that has more wires than you'd imagine.
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January 07, 2020, 12:31 PM
Pipe SmokerPara, you must have your Epson V600 by now. How is it working out?
Serious about crackers. January 29, 2020, 09:33 AM
Pipe SmokerBump.
Also, is the Epson V600’s USB jack USB-C?
Serious about crackers. January 29, 2020, 11:46 AM
smschulzquote:
Originally posted by parabellum:
Nice, but according to the Epson manual for the V600 which I downloaded, this device does not use a USB A-type connector. It uses a USB B-type connector.
That article you linked to is somewhat confusing. It suggests that the V600 does have wireless capability, but I'm not finding this in the manual.
"Epson Scan can be used to scan via a USB connection or using a wired or wireless (Wi-Fi) network connection.
By default Epson Scan is set to scan via a USB cable, and will present an error if Epson Scan is opened and a scanner is connected via a network or Wi-Fi connection.
The following article explains how to change the settings in Epson Scan to allow scanning via a network or Wi-Fi connection."Err...

It's certainly worth a try when I get the scanner but something's not right somewhere in the documentation. If this device
does have wireless functionality, Epson certainly has done a superb job of hiding it.
The V600 is not networkable.
https://epson.com/faq/SPT_B11B...at=faq-8796127602764A good quality scanner but would be a deal breaker for me.
It appears to scan very well from tech reviews I have seen.