What scanner to use

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by NYandW, Dec 3, 2015.

  1. NYandW

    NYandW Makes Cents!

    I'm seeking some guidance as to what scanner(s) to purchase and techniques unique to coin scanning folks may have experienced? Thank you.
     
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  3. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Better to choose an affordable point and shoot camera with macro capabilities than to rely on a scanner for taking pics........we are talking coins, correct?
     
  4. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Oh, and you left out the 'O' in NY and W.......
     
  5. tommyc03

    tommyc03 Senior Member

    Scanners will only work for straight on ob/rev shots but I use my Epson V37 for this purpose. It has lot's of bells and whistles to make good photos with, including lighting corrections and lots of other stuff. Of course, as stated above, a macro capability is excellent as is a good scope. I just don't have the camera technique nailed down yet.
     
  6. coinman1234

    coinman1234 Not a Well-Known Member

    I prefer just taking photos, even with a cell phone, to a scanner. You get a better representation of the coin with a camera of some sort. Scanned photos also tend to lack luster and make coins look more lifeless.
     
    swamp yankee likes this.
  7. NYandW

    NYandW Makes Cents!

    No. It's part of a free-lance proto model rail line New York & Western that is the Tri-State Gateway around NY City: http://www.trainsarefun.com/nyandw/nyandw.htm

    Sorry to digress folks, but being "nit-picked" on this is nonsense.
     
    thomas mozzillo likes this.
  8. NYandW

    NYandW Makes Cents!

    Yes coins... But I have quite a few and stamps, paper, etc.
     
  9. NYandW

    NYandW Makes Cents!

    I'll take the advice on the camera approach with 16M lens I have. Super, thank you. :)
     
  10. SuperDave

    SuperDave Free the Cartwheels!

    A scanner does not create lifelike images of a coin. A decent scanner (most of them) combined with appropriate technique (the sharpest results a scanner will give you are usually not at its' greatest optical resolution) will provide a very nice illustration of a coin's technical details. What it cannot do is correctly capture the look and feel of the surface - luster, color, reflectivity.

    Quality photographic images of coins require far more complex technique and knowledge of photography. A few point-and-shoot cameras do rather nicely, but modern rigs with big zooms and high megapixel counts are at their worst where we require quality. You'll get better results from a 10 year old 5MP Olympus.

    If you've an iPhone - 5 or older, I don't know about the 6's yet - you already have a camera as good for coins as any point and shoot.
     
    tommyc03 likes this.
  11. coinzip

    coinzip Well-Known Member

    You may have a tough time capturing luster with a scanner.

    I use my phone to take images of the whole coin, and a Dino-Lite to take micro photos.

    [​IMG][​IMG]
    [​IMG]
     
    rzage and swamp yankee like this.
  12. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Was thinkin' more NY, Ontario, and Western.....:) Old Women......
     
  13. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Sorry, excuse me......you are blocked.....
     
    Markus1959 likes this.
  14. SuperDave

    SuperDave Free the Cartwheels!

    You nitpicked him on his nick and then blocked him when he called you out? On the subject of blocking, I won't be seeing any more of your posts. You're part of the problem.
     
  15. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Well. you won't see this but you are blocked too......
     
    rzage and Markus1959 like this.
  16. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    And I could care the devil less.....
     
    Markus1959 likes this.
  17. NYandW

    NYandW Makes Cents!

    Being very new here, what does this mean? With 25 years on blogs, Compuserve, AOL, etc...
     
  18. tommyc03

    tommyc03 Senior Member

    How did this thread get so far off the mark of the original OP? Kinda' sad.
     
  19. tommyc03

    tommyc03 Senior Member

    If anyone could give me a few quick tips I would certainly appreciate it and sorry, not meaning to hi jack this thread. I have a Nikon Coolpix L100 and have only used it for scenery, my digs, barns, trains and such.
     
  20. NYandW

    NYandW Makes Cents!

    Thank you. My OP was about "guidance as to what scanner(s) to purchase and techniques". Folks have advised that the camera approach is superior as noted above. My member name created the "nonsense", I guess, not on my end.
     
    tommyc03 likes this.
  21. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    While a camera is the best way to go, it also requires a bit of work.

    I used to use an HP Scanjet 3970 Scanner until Windows Vista came out. HP no longer created a driver for it for Vista or Windows 7.

    I have it hooked up to an older XP System but the bulb is getting very tired.

    I used that scanner for the following images:

    IKE 1971 Toner 13499584 PCGS MS64 Coin.jpg IKE 1971-D 11189846 PCGS MS65 Gold Toned Coin.jpg IKE 1971-D PKOK.jpg

    No way the scanner would repeat this since, as I said, it's fairly old (2004).

    I've shopped for scanners but it's kinda hard to test drive one that'll do coins. From what I understand, it needs 3d capabilities or else the images (especially in slabs) are out of focus.

    I'm afraid that a good quality scanner would run me between $1700 and $2500 and I just don't have that kind of money to blow on something which may or may not meet my needs.

    Here's what the scanner does today:

    Garage Scans-Rebel 1st 015.jpg

    Notice the horizontal streaks? This slab was scanned sideways otherwise the streaks would be vertical and really obvious.

    I purchased an Epson V33 which I hate as the scanning bulbs create what looks like an artificial luster which I have no idea on how to correct.

    img037D.jpg

    The image above was lightened a bit sooo, I hang on to the HP 3970 which gives (or gave) reasonable out of the box images.
     
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