On 06/15/2012 09:17 PM, Chris Tofu wrote:
I still have many many many large tomes and other
printed material,
including vintage docs, that needs to be committed to digital format.
I'm always building something, and I gathered a hodge podge of
materials in an attempt to fenagle my own document feeder (first
thought I'd use a scanner or pair, later said screw that I'll just
use a digital camera). Non destructive scanning isn't necessarily a
whole lot more difficult in my estimation (using whatever curdled
gray matter I have left), but who needs any more complexity then is
necessary, so I opted for destructive scanning (where you rip the
spine of the book apart and jam it in the mechanism). Then strolling
through Target, I noticed the Epson Workforce 645 which allegedly can
take a stack of 30 sheets and scan both sides. I'd prefer 30,000
sheets, but beggars can't always be choosers. So I bought it, but
have yet to open it (my ethic states I shouldn't crack an item unless
I'm somewhat positive I'll keep it. I _rarely_ return something I
open. It bothers me to). So I would just like to ask if any of you
all have delved into this. A piddly 30 sheet document feeder still
requires you to "be there", although I suppose I could catch up on
twiddling my thumbs at least while I reduce oh 300 books to bits and
bytes.
I'd think it'd almost always be preferable to get a used, older, but
made of metal and built like a tank REAL production scanner on the
surplus market than a plastic piece of consumer crap that's designed to
break after a few uses.
Not at all insulting you for your purchase, but we all know how crappy
the consumer stuff is nowadays. I'd return it and put your money into
something beefy that'll actually last through those books.
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA