Re: Scanning with AN glass
Hanging below won't help with film flatness.
Tape residue is no problem at all, nothing to remove, really - depending on tape used.
Yes you could scan a sandwich but I'm not sure it will be helpful.
I'd work on a way to hold the film under tension with no glass contact at all, or fluid mount instead.
TMax100 is about the only film that has a problem with newton rings when laying directly on the glass emulsion down.
Re: Scanning with AN glass
Use Scotch Magic Tape, the real one; you'll have no residue, and it really holds the film well.
Scanning through two pieces of glass will likely deteriorate the scanned image.
Re: Scanning with AN glass
I've got AN glass from Focal Pointe and have been having trouble with it and Portra. Always Newton Rings. On my 4990 I have the platen-negative face down towards platen-AN glass foggy side against film. Negative/glass propped on pennies off the platen. I thought that's how the directions stated to use it but I still get newton rings. Sandwhiching between glass has made them worse.
Re: Scanning with AN glass
Try ground glass instead of AN, obviously only above the neg. But taped to that, air space below, should be ring-free. The GG might lower contrast slightly, though I've found it easier to manage tonality using this method.
Re: Scanning with AN glass
With consumer flatbeds, the sensor and lens are under the glass platen, and the light source is in the lid. If you tape a negative to the bottom of a sheet of AN glass and use feet to hold the glass off of the scanner platen, then you are not scanning through the AN glass. The light is going from the light source and through the AN glass, negative, scanner glass, off a couple of first surface mirrors, through a lens, and onto a sensor. You don't want to put AN glass between the negative and the sensor unless you really have to. It will limit what you can resolve. You'll get smears instead of sharp grain, for example. This might not be noticeable, though, depending on the resolution of the scan.
Re: Scanning with AN glass
I've seen granularity from scanning through AN glass at 1200 DPI on an Epson... So you definitely don't want to scan through it. The "suspended upside-down" method is best.