
Originally Posted by
Bruce Watson
In drum scanning, aperture size is a determining factor in actual optical resolution. The Heidelberg tango scanners have a minimum aperture of 11 microns, which is large for drum scanners. My speculation based on my research is that the small Heidelberg was aimed at the advertising market. When your biggest enlargement is a two-page spread in a magazine, 11 microns can be sufficient.
The Aztek scanners were intended as more flexible scanners for a wider range of duties. As such even the lower end scanners have minimum apertures of around 6 microns, and the higher end scanners make it down to around 3 microns. That is, when push comes to shove, the Aztek scanner will easily out-resolve the Heidelberg. So, if you are making a large print, and your image is highly detailed, you'll get a sharper more highly detailed print from the Aztek scan. All other things being equal.
Then there's film. WCI doesn't like negative film. They used to say this right on their website. I think this is because the Heidelberg software for the tango scanner makes scanning negative film more difficult than scanning tranny film. Aztek's DPL software OTOH isn't biased for either tranny or negative film and can do either with about the same amount of effort. The same is true of the older Trident software for the Aztek scanners.
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