Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 19

Thread: Aztec or Tango scans

  1. #1

    Aztec or Tango scans

    My local lab has an Aztec photo lab 8000 drum scanner, and charges $40 for a 200 mb scan of 4x5. I have had one scan done so far, but not yet made a print. This is new to me and really have nothing to compare this too. West Coast Imaging claim the Tango is the best drum scanner (of course they would) and charge about the same. I would like to know if you guys have had experience with both scanners. Ideally I would have a scan made with each, but it gets kinda pricey.
    My lab is slow, and takes about 7 days to have a scan made. I am not sure about the experience or dedication of the guys who work the Aztec. I live in a college town, say no more. That alone may be good reason to use someone else.
    Any thoughts appreciated, thanks.

  2. #2

    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Posts
    9,487

    Re: Aztec or Tango scans

    Well it is like Doug's post from a few days ago, the skill of the operator is probably the most important factor, even more than which scanner is ultimately "better". And you probably won't know what to compare unless you spring for a scan from both places.

  3. #3
    Ted Harris's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2000
    Location
    New Hampshire
    Posts
    3,465

    Re: Aztec or Tango scans

    I scan for others and don't use either of those; I use two high-end flatbeds, a Screen Cezanne and a Kodak/Creo IQsmart 3. Frank is right. When you are dealing with high end scanners it is the person operating the machine and how much care and attention they give your scan that counts.

  4. #4
    jetcode
    Guest

    Re: Aztec or Tango scans

    Quote Originally Posted by Ted Harris View Post
    I scan for others and don't use either of those; I use two high-end flatbeds, a Screen Cezanne and a Kodak/Creo IQsmart 3. Frank is right. When you are dealing with high end scanners it is the person operating the machine and how much care and attention they give your scan that counts.
    and it helps to have really good equipment too - signed another flatbed user

  5. #5

    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Bend, OR
    Posts
    392

    Re: Aztec or Tango scans

    That is the same scanner that I have and use. My feeling is the same as those from above- the skill of the operator is going to matter more than the particular scanner being used. I have georgeous results from my scanner that have been proven out in up to 40 x 50 inch prints but I have on occasion not executed a scan to the best of my ability and the results were less than spectacular and a repeat scan with more care was needed. Care and attention are the most important factors.

  6. #6
    Resident Heretic Bruce Watson's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    USA, North Carolina
    Posts
    3,362

    Re: Aztec or Tango scans

    Much depends on the skill of the operator, true. Beyond that, much depends on the size of the final print, and on your film, exposure, processing, etc.

    I own and drive an Optronics ColorGetter 3 Pro drum scanner with ColorRight Pro 2.0 software for the record. I've not driven any of the Azteks or the Heidleberg drum scanners, but their strengths and weaknesses aren't completely unknown to me as I did a lot of research prior to buying my scanner.

    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.

    Bottom line? Like with most things it depends on what you want. Much of the quality of a scan is intangible. You have to make value judgments based on your image and your needs for your prints. And in the end, the only way to find out is to do it both ways, make prints (or small sections of what would be full sized prints), and compare the prints (comparing on screen isn't going to tell you what you need to know to make an informed decision).

    Bruce Watson

  7. #7

    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Location
    Santa Cruz, CA
    Posts
    2,094

    Re: Aztec or Tango scans

    Quote Originally Posted by Bruce Watson View Post
    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.
    .
    I actually have an Aztek Premier, 8000 dpi wonder. I have tested it numerous times against the Tango. The Aztek scanner is clearly superior.

    There are three specific issues. As Bruce mentions above, the Aztek has a 3 micron capability. This means that it is going to be quite a bit sharper than the Tango. I have tested this with test targets, etc., against the one that Bill Atkinson uses. Suffice it to say, the operator was expert.

    The Tango's 11 micron fixed aperture has another consequence. You can't modify it to scan larger or smaller. So if your grain is right around 11 microns you're in luck. The good news is that a lot of film falls into the 10-13 micron category. The bad news is that color neg film should be scanned at approx 19-22 microns. Scanning it at 11 microns will cause sever grain anti-aliasing. The word on the street - when everyone had Tango's - was that you couldn't scan negs. It's ludicrous, of course, you just can't scan them well on a Tango.

    The Aztek has another advantage - its software. Standard scanning practice is to make an adjustment with a levels or curve type dialog so that the scan is a little closer to what you would want in the print - than a raw scan would be. The software then scans in raw and applies whatever correction is made after the scan is complete, just before showing it to you. This can comb the histogram, sometimes substantially. Aztek's Digital Photolab has the capacity to load the corrected values directly to the firmware inside the scanner and the scanner scans in the range that was selected, with all the corrections already applied, returning a healthy file every time.

    Finally, if you are getting the type of scan that almost everyone gets, partially corrected, or something close to what you would want - this is going to depend on the operator. If its someone running the scanner that's new to photography - or just has a different idea what a good print looks like than you do - you might get a file that's corrected in a way that you hadn't intended.

    This is why I have always advocated for working with a smaller shop, someone who will look at your work before they scan your film, and maybe ask you a few questions about what's important to you. And if they scan it in some strange way, they should have the integrity to scan it differently without another charge. This is the way I have set up my operation - these machines are quite sensitive and you have to know what direction you're going in or you will make the wrong scan.

    BTW, 200mb's off a 4x5 is a tiny file, takes the scanner about 2 minutes to scan it... Price is reasonable, but I would get a little more, maybe a 4000 dpi scan... But that's just me. I wouldn't want to pay for another scan and do all the work all over again if I decided to make a larger print one day...

    Lenny
    eiger@eigerstudios.com

  8. #8
    Kirk Gittings's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2004
    Location
    Albuquerque, Nuevo Mexico
    Posts
    9,864

    Re: Aztec or Tango scans

    Standard scanning practice is to make an adjustment with a levels or curve type dialog so that the scan is a little closer to what you would want in the print - than a raw scan would be. The software then scans in raw and applies whatever correction is made after the scan is complete, just before showing it to you. This can comb the histogram, sometimes substantially. Aztek's Digital Photolab has the capacity to load the corrected values directly to the firmware inside the scanner and the scanner scans in the range that was selected, with all the corrections already applied, returning a healthy file every time.
    Interesting.....a question for everyone.

    I would think that any software worth it salt would apply the adjustments inside the scan delivering a full histogram file, but I have been involved in many debates concerning this very point with some arguing that all scanning software works this way and some arguing that none do. I think, this is relatively easy to detect on 8 bit files where it is easy to break the histogram. For instance run an 8 bit file basically raw and apply significant clipping and a steep curve in PS to break the histogram vs. applying the same clipping and curve in the scanning software. On even an Epson 750 with Silverfast the first example, applying the adjustments in PS will significantly break the histogram where applying the same adjustments in SF will not, delivering a full histogram. Is that a valid test of whether a given scanning software is applying the adjustments in the scan? What else would explain it?
    Last edited by Kirk Gittings; 9-Dec-2007 at 22:16.
    Thanks,
    Kirk

    at age 73:
    "The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
    But I have promises to keep,
    And miles to go before I sleep,
    And miles to go before I sleep"

  9. #9

    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    NY area
    Posts
    1,029

    Re: Aztec or Tango scans

    When you're paying $40 for a drum, or other wet mount scan, think about the time involved and the amount of time it should take. I'm not referring to the file size and speed of actual scanning, but the amount of time needed to carefully clean the neg, wet mount the neg, scan, carefully remove the wet neg, and clean the wet neg. That's a lot of handling of the neg by someone who is only making $40 for the whole process and has to pay off expensive machinery. At this price the only way to make a living doing scans is by volume and the key to volume is speed and spending as little time as possible producing the product. Cutting corners and ganging up scans is the expedient way to save time here. This is not the type of business model that I would feel comfortable in sending my negs to.

    This is why I believe that you should always consider the quality of the scan, ability and reputation of the scan operator and have cost as a secondary consideration.

    As for Tango scanners, the only experience I have with them was with Nancy Scans ( a big mistake and one that was not consistent with the comments I made above). The scan was of a very subtle and highly saturated color image. They scanned it twice on a Tango and both scans were so unbelievably noisy and artifact filled as to be unusable. The same chrome scanned flawlessly on my Imacon 646. Was the failure of the Nancy Scans the operator or equipment failure? As they scanned it twice and therefore one would think that they paid more attention to it the second time that it was the equipment (Tango).

  10. #10

    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Location
    Santa Cruz, CA
    Posts
    2,094

    Re: Aztec or Tango scans

    Quote Originally Posted by Brian K View Post
    When you're paying $40 for a drum, or other wet mount scan, think about the time involved and the amount of time it should take. I'm not referring to the file size and speed of actual scanning, but the amount of time needed to carefully clean the neg, wet mount the neg, scan, carefully remove the wet neg, and clean the wet neg. That's a lot of handling of the neg by someone who is only making $40 for the whole process and has to pay off expensive machinery. At this price the only way to make a living doing scans is by volume and the key to volume is speed and spending as little time as possible producing the product. Cutting corners and ganging up scans is the expedient way to save time here. This is not the type of business model that I would feel comfortable in sending my negs to.
    I think that's what happened to you at Nancyscans. The Tango should beat the Imacon, every time. I hear tons of horror stories from my clients who finally make it here after dealing with a lab. When you consider processing a roll of film for a few bucks, it's all based on piecework, lots of volume. They hire people at the lowest rate to do the processing. Same with the scans, its how they think. Nancyscans is just like this, so is the factory in India.

    I have a Masters degree in Photography, and the other person here who might touch the scanner also has a degree in Photography. It's very different when you have someone who understands what you are after with your image doing the work. You aren't going to find this in a factory setting.

    Lenny
    EigerStudios

Similar Threads

  1. Imacon 848 scans - is this OK ??
    By Matus Kalisky in forum Digital Processing
    Replies: 20
    Last Post: 6-Jun-2011, 14:19
  2. Purchase drum Scanner or pay for scans
    By Dave Jeffery in forum Digital Hardware
    Replies: 50
    Last Post: 31-Dec-2007, 16:53
  3. Declining Quality of 4990 Scans
    By Brian Vuillemenot in forum Digital Hardware
    Replies: 8
    Last Post: 22-Nov-2007, 21:58
  4. West Coast Imaging or Calypso?
    By Dan V in forum Digital Processing
    Replies: 59
    Last Post: 10-Sep-2007, 01:52
  5. Special Pricing on Tango Scans from Calypso Imaging
    By Capocheny in forum Resources
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: 15-Feb-2007, 20:25

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •