Art, This is a perfect analysis of the Polaroid situation. I thought I'd add one more comment, more of a perspective. I am the former owner of an SS4000. I now own a Nikon LS-4000. I 'upgraded', really, for one reason -- the roll film adapter, and it is wonderful. Digital Ice is nice, but not really a requirement.
But (isn't there always a but). The Polaroid is a better scanner. Sharper, more detail, just better results. Given the price difference, the SS4000 is one of the best deals out there. Tom Very simply put, there are only three reasons I can think of for not buying the SS4000. 1) If you have badly damaged images that have a lot of scratches or surface damage, the SS4000 will not currently clean them up as simply as will dICE cube. I say currently, because the possibility exists some software solutions might be in the works. I do not want to imply that the SS4000 amplifies surface damages or dust, it does not, in fact, it diminishes those things relative to other scanners (Minoltas and Nikons without using dICE, as examples) 2) You are doing a lot of negative scans and your coordination is somewhat impaired. The SS4000 scanner uses, what, in my opinion, is a poor negative holder design. It is somewhat awkward to load. I am hoping Polaroid hears those of us who have ranted about this, and offers a redesign. Some of us have given them several pointers in how to fix this. It is usable, but it could be much better. PS: the slide carrier is a dream to load, in contrast. 3) As you likely know, Polaroid is in Chapter 11 protection, meaning the company's future is not known. They are apparently seriously seeking out buyers. However, if you are concerned about future support, repairs, etc, although the Polaroid SS4000 is made by Microtek, and probably could be repaired through their services if push came to shove, should Polaroid be sold and the new company choose not to take on the warranties, repairs could be somewhat costly. This scenario is NOT likely to happen for a number of reasons, however (below). a) Polaroid SS4000 have a very low breakdown rate compared to other scanners, so the liability is not high for whomever takes on their product line. b) If the scanner is going to show a defect, it would likely do so very soon after purchase, and you might still have options from the vendor (exchange). I would recommend you put it through the paces as soon as you get it for extra protection. c) You could buy a independent warranty to cover it in case. Or if you use some credit cards, they give you a private coverage free if you buy using it. d) If Polaroid is bought, due to (a) above, it would be stupid for the new owner to not cover repairs under warranty because it is just a bad way to start taking over a customer base, as it would alienate Polaroid's best scanner clients, those who already own a model. e) The SS4000 is selling so inexpensively based upon its true value that even if you ended up buying two, you'd still be ahead based upon any other current models out there in terms of features and scan quality. In other words, I can see of no reason anyone wouldn't consider this model if they did not own a scanner already. Oh, last comment, I'm not sure Silverfast is necessary to get great results from the SS4000, but it come cheaply in this case. Art -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Unsubscribe by mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], with 'unsubscribe' in the title or body
