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Kodak 35 Rapid Film ScannerAbout Kodak 35 Rapid Film Scanner
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Manual

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Manual - 1 page  Manual - 2 page  Manual - 3 page 

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Kodak 35 Rapid Film Scanner, size: 3.0 MB
Related manuals
Kodak 35 Rapid Film Scanner Using THE Scanner
Kodak 35 Rapid Film Scanner Transmitting Scan Data

 

Kodak 35 Rapid Film Scanner

 

 

User reviews and opinions

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Comments to date: 12. Page 1 of 1. Average Rating:
buggs_moran 5:00pm on Tuesday, September 7th, 2010 
Good camera for first time users. Simple to use and good pictures. "Short Lag Time","Bright LCD","Easy Setup","Comfortable Controls"
andreyk 2:44pm on Monday, August 30th, 2010 
Is built lightly, not for abuse, but ran continuously for a several day project without any problems. Overall this scanner is more than I expected for use. It will handle everything I need in a scanner. The scanner is evetything that was said it was. I've had this for about two weeks and have had no problems. I've scanned photos and doents, both have come out great.
JAVANDIVER 2:34pm on Thursday, August 26th, 2010 
Misrepresented with No Customer Support I just want to echo the other reviewers of this piece of trash. I installed the BlazeVIdeo 1.
franjb68 3:57am on Wednesday, August 11th, 2010 
asus rampage 3 formula as review before me This thing is FAST! I was scared to try this thing out too but very glad I did.download drivers from ocz.
PELEROM2000 10:05am on Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010 
Highly recommend this scanner, particularly because of Digital Ice software that enables one to scan older. This is my 2nd Epson photo scanner, and I am very pleased with both (1st was a 2400 Photo). I like the Digital ICE dust and scratch removal.
flagship 7:26am on Saturday, June 12th, 2010 
Easy install and great looks Film adapter takes some thought... It looks slick You need to put your photo upside down on the platen
BigAssWeb 2:55am on Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010 
After a few years using first a Canonscan with no ICE, and Epson 4990 with ICE, and now this machine I have experienced all levels of useage.
songbird 2:14pm on Friday, May 21st, 2010 
A little bit overpriced I would give it a value of $250 but i think in time the price will fall. AMD 1090T + Asus Crosshair IV Extreme Extremely fast.
fredD 4:51am on Wednesday, May 5th, 2010 
Unless you are planning to do hundreds of professional scans a day, this is an excellent option for multi-function scanning of negatives.
kmarkowicz 7:42pm on Sunday, March 14th, 2010 
Good hardware that needs better MacOS software support The hardware is well designed and provides very good quality scans. aaxa p1 pico projector this is a great little projector , it is easy to set up. i like to play playstation with it and it goes on most flat surfaces. 3-D, clarity, micro/macro and overall usefulness I use a full frame Nikon camera that is sensitive to low light and can use an f/2.
DaveJ 11:52pm on Thursday, March 11th, 2010 
Good camera for the casual user. Easy to use. "Comfortable Controls","Strong Construction","Bright LCD" "Long Lag Time" I love this camera! I tried to find a camera with a pretty high mps under $120.00. I got this camera and a 1g sd mem. card, for [$].
abangash 8:26pm on Thursday, March 11th, 2010 
Well, The LiDe 80 is faster (USB 2.0) than the LiDe 30 (USB 1.1) that I used previously. It works better on Mac OS X now, too, i.e.

Comments posted on www.ps2netdrivers.net are solely the views and opinions of the people posting them and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of us.

 

Documents

doc0

The normal customer response to a demo of integrated Hawkeye II camera was, "That's incredible! It would be perfect for my application if it only had one more special feature." So FSD returned to the tethered camera configuration, designing a totally modular camera system that could be easily expanded and adapted. A patented "image bus" backplane accommodated plugin circuit boards. Interchangeable camera heads, battery and power modules completed the system. A few units were sold with Brier 20-Mbyte floppy drives and built-on video monitors. A two-headed camera was built for stereo photography. The camera achieved real fame in 1991, when it went into orbit on Shuttle mission STS-44.
Stock Nikon F3 body, some units with motor winder Optional monochrome or color Kodak KAF-1300 series image sensor (M3) (1320 x 1035, 16 m) Internal 100-Mbyte hard drive Removable lead acid battery module Intel 80C188 uController, PL/M All other features of integrated Hawkeye II camera
Camera EO Tactical Hawkeye II int Hawkeye II teth Hawkeye II teth Hawkeye II teth

Imager M1 M1 M1 M1 M3 M3

Pixels 1035x1320 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280
CFA Mono Mono Mono Mono Mono 3G RGB
ISO 200-800 200-800 50-400 50-400 50-400 50-400

FPS 2 2

Depth 6 6

D-5000 (1989)

Developed by the Electronic Photography Division (EPD), The D-5000, or ECAM was the prototype of all modern professional digital single-lens reflex (SLR) cameras. A compact autofocus SLR with megapixel color imager, memory card slots, JPEG, and what's this? No image display on the back? The DOS model added a PCMCIA-ATA card slot. Although not a product of the FSD or Professional Photography Division (PPD) teams, the camera was marketed by FSD to government customers, and many of the original ECAM team brought their expertise to PPD for later projects.
Color or monochrome Kodak KAF-1300 series image sensor (3M) (1280x1024, 16 m). Color ISO 160 Standard K mount lenses Auto focus with illuminator M, Av, Program auto exposure TTL flash Selectable color balance SRAM or flash memory card slot

IRIS (1990)

Larry McMillan of the Professional Photography Division (PPD) had championed the Kodak 35 mm rapid film scanner (RFS) to meet the news photographer's need to send images home electronically as quickly as possible. He saw that a digital camera could eliminate the time to process film. IRIS was a confidential project to create a memory card camera for photojournalists. The camera was as simple as possible, with no image processing or bells and whistles; it saved the raw imager data to the card. Just a few demo units were built.

Stock Nikon F3 body SRAM memory card slot
Professional Camera Back (1990)
Just as the integrated Hawkeye II camera was cool but not quite enough for the government customers, IRIS didn't meet the real needs of the news shooters. PPD had paid to develop the first color megapixel imager (M3) and conceived a fast frame rate news camera that could directly transmit images from the field without a computer. PPD had the right imager and the right market; FSD had the camera architecture, so the two teams combined the M3 with the Hawkeye II image bus electronics in a sleek and commercial-looking plastic housing. Several demo cameras were shown privately at Photokina and publicly at the NPPA Electronic Workshop in November of 1990. Most of the FSD development team moved to PPD to commercialize a camera in response to the ensuing excitement.
KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS (1991)
By May of 1991, PPD was ready to announce the first Kodak Professional Digital Camera System at a New York City press conference. The prototype camera was spruced up with a much larger image LCD and optional JPEG compression and serial transmission boards. Six models were priced from $20,000 to $25,000. The slogan "Convert to a new digital system without switching cameras" suggested that the familiar F3 camera body would make the digital transition simple and easy! To make the system easily luggable for the planet-roving photojournalist, a custom nylon hip pack and an enormous hard case were thrown in for free. After the launch of the Kodak Professional DCS 200 IR digital camera, a magazine reviewer named this camera the DCS 100. Although never official, the name stuck, even within Kodak. A total of 987 units were sold from 1991 to 1994.
Stock Nikon F3 body with motor winder Color or monochrome KAF-1300 (M3) imager (1320x1035, 16 m) 8-bit A/D Monochrome LCD image display NTSC video output SCSI interface Removable lead acid camcorder battery Intel 80C188 uController, PL/M multitasking firmware Internal 200-Mbyte hard drive (160 uncompressed/600 compressed images) Optional JPEG compression board, serial interface, and captioning keyboard 8- or 32-Mbyte buffer memory Acquire module software for Adobe Photoshop (Macintosh) Plug-in software for Aldus Photostyler (Windows)

Camera DCS DC3 DCS DC3/32 DCS DC3/B DCS DM3 DCS DM3/32 DCS DM3/B

Imager M3 M3 M3 M3 M3 M3

Pixels 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280
CFA 3G RGB 3G RGB 3G RGB Mono Mono Mono
ISO 100-800 100-800 100-800 200-1600 200-1600 200-1600
FPS 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.5

Depth 24 6

KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS 200 (1992)
Announced at MacWorld Boston in August 1992, the DCS 200 targeted desktop publishing rather than photojournalism. In sharp contrast to the complexity and cost of the original DCS, the 200 was the simplest DCS camera ever. Everything but the imager fit onto one circuit board. 2.5-inch hard drives had just appeared and were just the size to tuck under the camera body. The 8008s was the least-expensive Nikon body with a removable back. The simple camera was conceived and commercialized in less than a year and shocked a market expecting minor improvements to the original DCS. The non-i models omitted the internal hard drive to lower the price. All models supported HitchHiker external hard drives for removable storage. For the commercial studio, a monochrome 200 with the Kodak Professional color filter wheel accessory produced superb color images. The filter wheel was an afterthought and was controlled by an interface piggybacked on the SCSI port. The original plan to sell the low-cost back without the body was scrapped. 3,240 cameras were sold from 1992 to 1994.
Stock Nikon 8008s body 8-bit A/D 2-Mbyte buffer Internal 80-Mbyte 2.5-inch SCSI hard drive (50 images) Removable AA batteries in body and back Status LCD, SCSI ID and DELETE buttons SCSI interface Intel 80C196 uController, PL/M firmware
Camera DCS 200c DCS 200ci DCS 200m DCS 200mi

Imager M5 M5 M5 M5

Pixels 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524
CFA Bay RGB Bay RGB Mono Mono
ISO 50-400 50-400 100-800 100-800

FPS 1/3 1/3 1/3 1/3

Depth 1 1
The use of the familiar and respected Nikon and Canon bodies for most DCS cameras was a marketing advantage, but the Kodak name didn't appear on the "crown" of the camera until the production of the Kodak Professional DCS Pro 14n digital camera. Many thought that the original DCS was a product of Nikon with some Kodak help, when in fact, Nikon was not aware of the project until it was announced. Nikon's actual participation began when they provided technical information for the stock N90 body used in the NC2000 camera. So, to avoid further confusion, the team decided to brand the DCS 200 with the huge Kodak logo on the grip.

DCS 200 + Architecture (NC2000, DCS 4XX, EOS DCS X)
The success of the DCS 200 camera encouraged a new electronic design to fit the same mechanical package as the earlier camera. Major improvements resolved problems with batteries and complaints about the slow performance and internal hard drive of the 200. The PCM CIA slot accepted the new Type III hard drive cards, and audio recording enabled a busy news photographer to add quick comments for captioning images. With only minor changes, the new main board was designed into dozens of camera models for Nikon, Canon, and medium-format bodies, with imagers from 1.2 to 6 megapixels. FSD designed the architecture into several specialized government models, including underwater models based on the Nikonos body.
12-bit A/D Audio recording (WAV files) Status LCD, SCSI ID, and DELETE buttons Single PCMCIA-ATA card slot Internal NiMH battery SCSI interface (undocumented parallel port mode) Intel 80C196 uController, PL/M firmware

AP NC2000 (1994)

Developed by Kodak "in cooperation with AP," announced by the Associated Press in February of 1994, and offered first to AP member newspapers for $17,500, the News Camera 2000 became the standard digital news camera. The Nikon N90s offered snappier autofocus than the 8008s. The NC2000e model with 16-Mbyte buffer memory was offered in 1996. The official relationship with Nikon began in 1994 and Nikon provided confidential documentation on the 10-pin body interface. 550 cameras were produced for the Associated Press.

Stock Nikon N90s body

Camera AP NC2000 AP NC2000e AP NC2000m AP NC2000ir

Imager M3 M3 M3 M3

Pixels 1012x1268 1012x1268 1012x1268 1012x1268
ISO 200-1600 200-1600 200-1600 200-1600

Depth 12 12

From 1995 to 1998, the DCS camera team was part of the new Digital and Applied Imaging (D&AI) Division and later 4XX cameras sported the new "Kodak digital science" logo. Although the original DCS logo was left behind, the honored DCS name would remain to the end.

KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS 4XX Digital Camera (1994)
The NC2000 was followed by a string of Kodak models. The most important was the Kodak Professional DCS 460 digital camera, which introduced the 6megapixel imager. The "world's highest resolution portable digital camera" captured images that begged comparison with film. Problems with charging the internal battery prompted the only DCS safety recall. One camera actually exploded in a customer's studio. Over 5000 cameras were produced.
Camera DCS 410c DCS 420c DCS 420ir DCS 420m DCS 420c P/S DCS 460c DCS 460m DCS 460c P/S DCS 460ir
Imager M5 M5 M5 M5 M5 M6 M6 M6 M6
Pixels 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 2036x3060 2036x3060 2036x3060 2036x3060
CFA Bay RGB Bay RGB Mono Mono Bay RGB Bay RGB Mono Mono Mono
ISO 100 100-400 200-800 200-800 100-80

FPS 2 2/8 2/8 2/8 2/8

Depth 2
KODAK PROFESSIONAL EOS-DCS (1995)
After the many Nikon-bodied DCS cameras, Canon longed to see its lens mount in front of those megapixel imagers, so they joined Kodak to help develop and market the EOS-DCS cameras, which carried the "in cooperation with Canon" label. Canon provided custom firmware and interface connections in the "D" branded EOS-1N body. Canon only sold the 1 and 3 models. Over 1000 cameras were produced.
Modified Canon EOS-1N body
Camera EOS-DCS 1c EOS-DCS 1m EOS-DCS 1ir EOS-DCS 3c EOS-DCS 3ir EOS-DCS 3m EOS-DCS 5c EOS-DCS 5ir EOS-DCS 5m
Imager M6 M6 M6 M3 M3 M3 M5 M5 M5
Pixels 2036x3060 2036x3060 2036x3060 1012x1268 1012x1268 1012x1268 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524
CFA Bay RGB Mono Mono Bay RGB Bay RGB Bay RGB Bay RGB IR Mono
ISO 80 200-1600 400-6400 400-6400 100-400 200-800 200-800
FPS Depth 0.0.0.2.2.2.2.2.2.3 10
KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS 465 (1995)
Studio photographers loved the Kodak Professional DCS 460 digital camera for its image quality, but they missed the flexibility of their medium format and view cameras. The DCS 465 was a DCS 460 with a standard Hasselblad back mount that could be hung on almost any studio camera with the right adapter. A row of connectors supported both electrical and mechanical trip cameras and studio flash units. About 200 units were produced.
Standard Hasselblad camera back mount Camera sync, electrical trip, mechanical trip, flash sync connectors
Camera DCS 465c DCS 465m DCS 465ir

Imager M6 M6 M6

Pixels 2036x3060 2036x3060 2036x3060

CFA Bay RGB Mono Mono

ISO 80

FPS 2/8 2/8 2/8

DCS 4XX GPS, CIR
After 1990, the FSD continued to create custom cameras to meet the special needs of government and military customers by modifying the commercial DCS products. These include global positioning system (GPS)- compatible models and the color infrared (CIR) models, which provided a unique capability that was ideal for environmental and law enforcement that required forestry and vegetation analysis.

Stock Nikon N90s body Interchangeable filters for selective spectral response
Camera DCS 420 GPS-C DCS 420 GPS-IR DCS 420 GPS-M DCS 420CIR DCS 460CIR

Imager M5 M5 M5 M5 M5

Pixels 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524
CFA Bay RGB Mono Mono Bay RGB Bay RGB
ISO 100-400 200-800 200-800 200-800 200-800

Depth 5

DCS 425, 435
Some of the FSD models became major repackaging projects. The Federal Systems Division (FSD) DCS 425 and DCS 435 digital cameras packed the 200+ electronics, batteries, and PCM CIA slot into a one-inch thick back for the Nikonos RS submersible camera for the serious military photographer.
Stock Nikonos RS body Replaceable 6v Lithium batteries
Camera DCS 425c DCS 425ir DCS 435

Imager M5 M5 M3

Pixels 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1268

CFA Bay RGB IR Bay RGB

ISO 100- 400 200- 800 200-1000
KODAK DIGITAL SCIENCE SCS 1000 Camera
Another ruggedized repackaged camera from FSD, the specialty camera system (SCS) 1000 cameras were noticeably more compact than the corresponding commercial EOS DCS models using the same Canon body.
Stock Canon EOS 1N body Optional MIL SPEC connector for SCSI and serial GPS capability 3v Lithium K123 batteries
Camera SCS 1000ir SCS 1000m

Imager M3 M3

Pixels 1012x1268 1012x1268

CFA IR Mono

ISO 16-3200 16-3200

FPS 2.3 2.3

Depth 10 10
Pro SLR Architecture (DCS 3XX, 5XX, 6XX)
Four years of 200+ family cameras created a long wish list for the next DCS generation. Professionals wanted instant image review and JPEG compression, like consumers enjoyed on their cheap digital cameras. Blue noise and color filter array (CFA) aliasing were the major image quality complaints. The design required a clean sheet and a lot of problem solving. A new PowerPC microprocessor would provide the horsepower for a graphical user interface and quick display of images. The originally designed image-processing path would finish and JPEG-compress images in real time, but that plan died in the details. Some models later provided background JPEG processing. The new Firewire interface made history of SCSI's bulky cables and terminator confusion.
Lithium Niobate blur filter 12-bit A/D Audio recording (WAV files) Color LCD, graphical user interface, 1/4/9 image display, histogram Status LCD White balance, tagging, card format and recover Background JPEG processing Dual PCM CIA-ATA card slots Removable NiCd/NiMH battery. IEEE 1394 (Firewire) interface for host computer Folding rigid-flex main circuit board Motorola MPC821 uController, C multitasking firmware Optional cell phone transmission kit

KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS 5XX, Canon EOS DXXXX (1998)
The partnership with Canon culminated in the first truly integrated DCS camera, where the body and back were seamlessly merged (well, almost). Canon provided an EOS 1N body with special firmware and no film transport parts. The 2-megapixel M15 imager used indium tin oxide (ITO) clock conductors and a new CFA mix to dramatically improve blue channel output. 3.6 superb images per second, no aliasing, and a pong game for downtime made it a winner with news and sports shooters. The revolutionary camera was launched at PMA in 1998 at $14,995 and was the first to carry the new Kodak Professional brand. The EOS D2000 and D6000 were Canon branded and marketed models functionally identical to the Kodak Professional DCS 520 and DCS 560 cameras.
DCS 520c DCS 520x DCS 560c DCS 560m EOS D2000c EOS D6000c
Imager M15 M15 M16 M16 M15 M16
Pixels 1152x1152x1728 2008x3040 2008x3040 1152x1728 2008x3040
CFA Bay RGB Xena CMY Bay RGB Bay RGB Bay RGB Bay RGB
ISO 200-1600 200-1600 80- 200 320- 800 200-1600 80- 200

FPS 3.6 3.1 3.6 1

Depth 12 3
KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS 3XX (1998)
Since the DCS 200, the team struggled to find a way to make a lessexpensive professional camera. The Calvin project was the first to reach the market after several attempts, and it was the first DCS with popup flash! The M5 imager and the new Pronea APS body made possible the lowest DCS price yet, only $4,995. The 315 introduced background JPEG processing and automatic white balance (scene balance). The Kodak Professional DCS 315 digital camera was the beginning of the "coopetition" relationship with Nikon that continued to the end of the DCS line. The DCS 315 images disappointed customers that were spoiled by the DCS 520 quality, but the much-better and still-affordable 3-megapixel DCS 330 was just the right camera for small portrait studios.
Modified Nikon Pronea 6i body AA batteries
Camera DCS 315c DCS 330c DCS 354c

Imager M5 M17 M24

Pixels 1008x1520 1504x2008 1958x2606
CFA Bay RGB Bay RGB Bay RGB

ISO 100-400 125-400

FPS 2 1

Depth 3 8

KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS 6XX (1999)
At PMA 1999, Kodak unveiled the super-pro Nikon F5 body, which was seamlessly integrated to the DCS 520 electronics and wrapped in a bulletproof magnesium housing. After Nikon launched the D1, later in '99, Kodak Professional planned to ease out of the photojournalist market and concentrate on studio photography. The Kodak Professional DCS 620x digital camera, with the super high ISO image quality of the Xena CMY imager was planned to be the last DCS photojournalist camera.

Modified Nikon F5 body

Camera DCS 620c DCS 620x DCS 660c DCS 660m DCS 660cir
Imager M15 M23 M16 M16 M16
Pixels 1152x1728 1152x1728 2008x3040 2008x3040 2008x3040
CFA Bay RGB Xena CMY Bay RGB Mono Mono

ISO 200-1600 400-6400 80- 200 320- 800 320- 800

FPS 3.6 3.1 1

Depth 3
By 1998, PPD had become Kodak Professional and the DCS team happily reunited with that organization. The rest of the DCS cameras proudly bore the red and gray Kodak Professional brand.
Pro 3 Architecture (DCS Pro Back, 7XX)
The new focus on the studio market meant more and more pixels! Kodak Professional added a TI DSP to the PowerPC to gain the performance to process all of those pixels.
12-bit A/D Audio recording (WAV files) Color LCD, graphical user interface, 1/4 image display, histogram Zoom and pan raw images Status LCD White balance, tagging, card format, and recover In-camera JPEG processing IEEE 1394 (Firewire) interface Motorola MPC823 uController, C multitasking firmware Texas Instruments TMS320C6211 DSP
KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS Pro Back (2000)
The 16-megapixel M11 imager packed with all the DCS Pro 3 features and horsepower made the Pro Back a worthy successor to the DCS 465. Launched at Photokina 2000, it heralded Kodak's serious attack on the digital studio market. There was no other portable studio back. The Plus model added a connector to support most electrical trip studio cameras. The DCS Pro Back was shipped with Kodak Professional capture studio software as well as the new Kodak Professional DCS Photo Desk application.
Hasselblad 555 ELD camera back mount Adapter for Mamiya RZ67 High-voltage flash sync Dual CF card slots Powered from Firewire cable or external battery
Camera DCS Pro Back DCS Pro Back m DCS Pro Back Plus

Imager M11 M11 M11

Pixels 4080x4080 4080x4080 4080x4080

CFA Bay RGB Mono Bay RGB

ISO 100

FPS 0.5 0.5 0.5

Depth 4
KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS 7XX (2001)
With Nikon still happy to supply F5s, it was natural, a "no brainer," in fact, to drop the new DCS Pro 3 electronics into the good old 6XX housing and make some very cool cameras. Despite the intent to back out of the market, the Kodak Professional DCS 720x digital camera was yet another great photojournalist camera with its high ISO and high frame rate. But the DCS 760, introduced at only $7,995, was destined to be a cult camera for the portrait and wedding photographers. The cameras were indestructible and made very nice images. Still available on eBay The Kodak Professional DCS camera manager software first shipped with the DCS 760. The Kodak Digital Science SCS2000 C camera was an FSD-modified, weather-resistant version of the DCS 720x.
Camera DCS 720x DCS 760c DCS 760m DCS 760ir SCS 2000c
Imager M23 M16 M16 M16 M23

Pixels 1152x1728 2008x3032 2008xx x 1728
CFA Xena CMY Bay RGB Mono Mono Xena CMY
ISO 400-6400 80-400 320-800 320-800 400-6400

FPS 4.3 1.5 1.5 1.5 4.3

Depth 25+ 24 25+
KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS Pro Back 645 (2002)
The project began as an even smaller Pro Back model to fit the totally new autofocus medium-format camera Hasselblad was secretly developing. The H1 was delayed enough that Kodak introduced models for the Mamiya and Contax 645 AF cameras first. Only the front plate and camera interface flex are different between the three models.
Custom fit for Mamiya 645 AF and AFD, Contax 645 AF, and Hasselblad H1 Single CF card slots Clip on Li ION battery Optional Li Niobate blur filter
Camera DCS Pro Back 645 C DCS Pro Back 645 H DCS Pro Back 645 M
ISO 100-400 100-400 100-400

FPS 0.55 0.55 0.55

Depth 8
PRO 14 Digital Camera Architecture
Bigger, faster, cheaper (and smaller and lighter, too), "the only camera you'll ever need" filled the 35 mm frame with pixels. Fill Factory of Belgium supplied the first non-Kodak and the first CMOS imager to be used in a DCS camera. The successful DCS Pro 3 architecture was supercharged with a much faster DSP to process the huge and messy C14 images. A snazzy user interface with popup menus and lots of new features included a "basic" mode for the overwhelmed user.
CF and SD/MMC card slots Removable Lithium ion battery IEEE 1394 (Firewire) interface Motorola MPC823 uController, C multitasking firmware Texas Instruments TMS320C6414 DSP
KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS Pro 14n Digital Camera (2002)
Late in 2002, the decision was made to end the Kodak Professional camera business, which had yet to make a profit. A last-minute reprieve amid hopes that a new projected camera might turn the tide led to the most dramatic DCS announcement ever. After Canon pre-leaked its announcement of the "world's highest resolution digital SLR," the 12-megapixel 1Ds at $9,000, the 14-megapixel DCS Pro 14n at only $4,995 stole the show at Photokina 2002. But the DCS Pro 14n was months late, and high ISO image noise was disappointing. Still, at $4,995, it was a very cheap studio camera that signaled the demise of the medium-format digital back.

Modified Nikon F80 body

Canon DCS Pro 14n DCS Pro 14n 512 DCS Pro 14n m

Imager C14 C14 C14

Pixels 3000x4500 3000x4500 3000x4500

CFA Bay RGB Bay RGB Mono

ISO 6-800 6-800 6-800

FPS 1.7 1.7 1.7

Depth 20
KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS Pro SLR/n Digital Camera (2004)
Fill Factory's disappointment in the C14 imager prompted them to redesign it and find a better imager foundry, in hopes of saving the Kodak Professional business. Announced at PMA, February 2004, the DCS Pro SLR/n camera with the new-and-improved X14 imager was the camera the 14n was meant to be. Loyal Pro 14n owners were offered an upgrade to the new imager, making their older cameras nearly the same as the new Pro SLR/n. Also announced in 2004, the Pro 14n and SLR/n could be upgraded by Kodak with the Pocket Wizard transceiver for versatile wireless camera and strobe triggering.
Camera DCS Pro SLR/n DCS Pro SLR/n m DCS Pro 14nx

Imager X14 X14 X14

ISO 6-1600 6-1600 6-1600
KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS Pro SLR/c Digital Camera (2004)
With the Canon relationship long gone, but with patent cross licenses still in place, Kodak enlisted Sigma to design and manufacture a Canon-mount version of the 14n using Kodak supplied imager modules and a body derived from the Sigma SD-9 digital camera. The new X14 imager came along just in time, so the new camera became the stablemate of the SLR/n. After its revelation at CeBIT 2004, happy Canon shooters celebrated the return of Canon mount DCS cameras. But alas, the party is over with this one.

Custom Sigma body.

DCS Pro SLR/c

Imager X14

Pixels 3000x4500

CFA Bay RGB

ISO 6-1600

FPS 1.7

Host Software
When the original DCS camera was introduced in 1990, it's friendly relationship with Macintosh computers and PCs appealed to the working professional whose income depended on efficiently moving images to print. The still video cameras of the day, and many video-oriented digital cameras to follow lacked the vital "workflow" pros wanted. The essential and acclaimed DCS host software evolved in concert with the features of the cameras.
KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS Acquire Module/TWAIN (1991)
Some things never change. In 1991, Adobe Photoshop was the application of choice in working with high-quality images. It was a Macintosh-only application then. Aldus offered PhotoStyler, a substitute for PhotoShop for Windows. The DCS software team provided plug-ins for both applications. The first few DCS cameras shipped with the Macintosh Acquire module only. Windows users were satisfied a few weeks later. By 1996, PhotoShop was running in Windows and the PC TWAIN standard allowed a single plug in to work with many imaging apps. The Acquire and PC TWAIN plug-ins provided direct control of the cameras through the SCSI interface as well as an efficient browser for images on camera or on disk.
KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS Photo Desk (2000)
Freedom from the limitations of the plug-in environment was the motivation to create two new standalone applications to replace the Acquire/TWAIN software. Photo Desk was a powerful browser and image-processing program that first shipped in December of 2000 and supported images from all DCS 520 and later cameras.

KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS Camera Manager (2001)
Photo Desk provided no tethered camera support, so the Camera Manager application was created to control Firewire connected cameras. Camera Manager was designed to work with Photo Desk. A click of the Take Picture button commanded the camera to capture and image, which Camera Manager could transfer to a folder open in Photo Desk, where the new image would appear. Later, a preview window was added to allow for quick adjustments before saving.
Model EO Tactical D-5000 IRIS Hawkeye II int. Hawkeye II teth. Hawkeye II teth EM PPD prototype DCS DC3 DCS DC3/32 DCS DC3/B DCS DM3 DCS DM3/32 DCS DM3/B DCS 200c DCS 200ci DCS 200m DCS 200mi AP NC2000 AP NC2000e AP NC2000m AP NC2000ir DCS 410c DCS 420c DCS 420ir DCS 420m DCS 420c P/S DCS 460c DCS 460m DCS 460c P/S DCS 460ir DCS 465c DCS 465m DCS 465ir EOS-DCS 1c EOS-DCS 1m EOS-DCS 1ir EOS-DCS 3c EOS-DCS 3ir EOS-DCS 3m EOS-DCS 5c EOS-DCS 5ir EOS-DCS 5m DCS 420 GPS-C DCS 420 GPS-IR DCS 420 GPS-M DCS 420CIR DCS 460CIR DCS 425c DCS 425ir DCS 435 SCS 1000ir SCS 1000m DCS 315c DCS 330c DCS 354c DCS 520c DCS 520x DCS 560c DCS 560m DCS 620c DCS 620x DCS 660c DCS 660m DCS 660cir EOS D2000c EOS D6000c DCS ProBack DCS ProBack m DCS ProBack Plus DCS 720x DCS 760c DCS 760m DCS 760ir DCS ProBack 645 C DCS ProBack 645 H DCS ProBack 645 M SCS 2000c DCS Pro 14n DCS Pro 14n 512 DCS Pro 14n m DCS Pro 14nx DCS Pro SLR/n DCS Pro SLR/n m

Catalog

Announced 1990 Sep 30, 1990 May 28, 1991 May 28, 1991 May 28, 1991 May 28, 1991 May 28, 1991 May 28, 1991 Aug 6, 1992 Aug 6, 1992 Aug 6, 1992 Aug 6, 1992
Venue FSD FSD EPD PPD FSD FSD FSD PK Kodak Kodak Kodak Kodak Kodak Kodak MacW MacW MacW MacW AP

Discont

Imgr M1 M1 M3 M1 M1 M1 M1 M3 M3 M3 M3 M3 M3 M3 M5 M5 M5 M5 M3 M3 M3 M3 M5 M5 M5 M5 M5 M6 M6 M6 M6 M6 M6 M6 M6 M6 M6 M3 M3 M3 M5 M5 M5 M5 M5 M5 M5 M6 M5 M5 M3 M3 M3 M5 M17 M24 M15 M23 M16 M16 M15 M23 M16 M16 M16 M15 M16 M11 M11 M11 M23 M16 M16 M16 M11 M11 M11 M23 C14 C14 C14 C14 X14 X14
um 6.8 6.6.8 6.8 6.8 6.9 6.8
Pixels 1035x1320 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1024x1280 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1268 1012x1268 1012x1268 1012x1268 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 2036x3060 2036x3060 2036x3060 2036x3060 2036x3060 2036x3060 2036x3060 2036x3060 2036x3060 2036x3060 1012x1268 1012x1268 1012x1268 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1524 2036x3060 1012x1524 1012x1524 1012x1268 1012x1268 1012x1268 1008x1520 1504x2008 1958x2606 1152x1728 1152x1728 2008x3040 2008x3040 1152x1728 1152x1728 2008x3040 2008x3040 2008x3040 1152x1728 2008x3040 4080x4080 4080x4080 4080x4080 1152x1728 2008x3032 2008x3032 2008x3032 4080x4080 4080x4080 4080x4080 1152x1728 3000x4500 3000x4500 3000x4500 3000x4500 3000x4500 3000x4500

Feb, 2002 Oct, 2002 Feb, Sep 24, Feb 12, 2004 Feb 12, 2004
PK PMA C&GS PK $4,995
Not sold Upgrade Not sold

Jan, 2004 Mar, 2004

PMA PMA

$4,995

Mar, 2005
Model EO Tactical D-5000 IRIS Hawkeye II int. Hawkeye II teth. Hawkeye II teth EM PPD prototype DCS DC3 DCS DC3/32 DCS DC3/B DCS DM3 DCS DM3/32 DCS DM3/B DCS DCS DCS DCS 200c 200ci 200m 200mi
Body Canon F1 Canon F1 Kodak Nikon F3 Nikon F3 Nikon F3 Nikon F3 Nikon F3 Nikon F3 Nikon F3 Nikon F3 Nikon F3 Nikon F3 Nikon F3 Nikon 8008s Nikon 8008s Nikon 8008s Nikon 8008s Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Med Format Med Format Med Format Canon EOS-1N Canon EOS-1N Canon EOS-1N Canon EOS-1N Canon EOS-1N Canon EOS-1N Canon EOS-1N Canon EOS-1N Canon EOS-1N Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Nikon N90s Nikonos RS Nikonos RS Nikonos RS Canon EOS-1N Canon EOS-1N Nikon Pronea 6i Nikon Pronea 6i Nikon Pronea 6i Canon EOS-1N Canon EOS-1N Canon EOS-1N Canon EOS-1N Nikon F5 Nikon F5 Nikon F5 Nikon F5 Nikon F5 Canon EOS-1N Canon EOS-1N Med Format Med Format Med Format Nikon F5 Nikon F5 Nikon F5 Nikon F5 Contax 645 AF Hasselblad H1 Mamiya 645 AF Nikon F5 Nikon N80 Nikon N80 Nikon N80 Nikon N80 Nikon N80 Nikon N80

RAM 10MB 20MB

FPS 5 5

Dep 6 12

Storage 100MB HD SRAM/Flash card SRAM card 5MB DRAM ISM 200MB HD 20MB Brier 200MB HD 200MB HD 200MB HD 200MB HD 200MB HD 200MB HD 200MB HD Ext 80MB HD Ext 80MB HD PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA PCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xCF 2xCF 2xCF 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA 2xPCMCIA CF CF CF 2xPCMCIA CF / MMC CF / MMC CF / MMC CF / MMC CF / MMC CF / MMC

Battery Lead Lead

I/F SCSI SCSI

Display

Processor 80C196 80C196 HC05 80C196 80C188 80C188 80C188 80C188 80C188 80C188 80C188 80C188 80C188 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196 80C196

doc1

KODAK PROFESSIONAL

HR SCANNING SOFTWARE
Now, simple-to-use, next-generation software makes the proven KODAK PROFESSIONAL HR 500, HR 500 Plus and HR Universal Film Scanners ideal for high-volume, stand-alone applications.
High-res, stand-alone scanning made simple.
Our new KODAK PROFESSIONAL HR Scanning Software offers all this: KODAK Image Science and industry-standard ICC color management produce top-quality TIFFs and JPEGs. DIGITAL ICE EnablementDIGITAL ICE Technology for dust/blemish removal on our range of HR Scanners. An automatic default for most common film type/size channels with the ability to create new channels easily. An advanced SBA (Scene Balance Algorithm) with many customizable parametersthat leads to beautiful flesh tones, greater first-scan yields. Many built-in image-processing functions; most can be customized to suit specific needs. The ability to drive our HR AutoStrip Gates and HR AutoSlide Automation Accessories. The HR Long Roll Accessory requires KODAK PROFESSIONAL Digital Print Production Software (DP2) or KODAK PROFESSIONAL HR Scanning Software LR (Europe only). Range of output file formats allow a range of scan-to-archive and complete workflow applications. From scanning and manipulation to printing, storage and beyond, Kodak offers a range of flexible and scalable Modular Digital Workflow Products that can help you build a powerful, promising digital future. To learn more, visit www.kodak.com/go/prolab

Imaging Solutions

optimize

output

KODAK PROFESSIONAL HR SCANNING SOFTWARE
Simple software that unleashes the power of HR scanning.
Our new HR Scanning Software features a user-friendly interface that can be tailored to suit changing needs and the level of sophistication of various operators. When combined with our Automation Accessories, our new Scanning Software lets you load film, click on Scan, and walk away. With this kind of minimal operator involvement, you can lower your labor costs and dedicate your people to more productive tasks.
The simple, intuitive interface makes the HR Scanning Software remarkably easy to use.

Advantages

Productivity: On-screen preview of complete film rolls. Useful image-processing functions include: - Unsharp masking - Cropping - Preview thumbnail generation - Flipping of mirror images A thumbnails bar shows images already scanned; enables rapid editing allowing you the possibility to correct images without the need to rescan. A new Click Black-Click White utility which allows the operator to stretch the final image histogram over the full length of the tone scale, providing richer contrast. In addition it is possible to neutralize the black and white tones. A go-to-frame function for quick scanning when only specific frames in a strip are required. Seamless integration with KODAK PROFESSIONAL Color Management Software giving you the confidence of WYSIWYG peformance. Accessory drives can be changed in seconds without having to close the software application. Flexibility: Shares information with existing infrastructure for integration into your workflow. Secondary image generation for Internet/CDs. Automatic scanning of 35mm and 120/220 strip film: color negative, color reversal, black and white.
Automatic scanning of 35mm mounted slides. User-definable Film Channels. A new order export utility to support workflows with the new KODAK PROFESSIONAL Digital Analyzer Workstation and some OEM data systems. Outputs a range of file formats including JPEG, TIFF and Image Pac.
Minimum System Requirements: 1.5 GHz PENTIUM 4 PC with WINDOWS 2000 Operating System or XP Professional Operating System 40 GB hard drive (ATA-100 minimum) CD-ROM drive 512 MB RD RAM High-speed Internet connection 19" or larger color monitor 24-bit color display card Disk space: 10 GB Support: High-speed Internet connection: ISDN or faster recommended Telephone support On-site assistance For further details on the whole range of KODAK PROFESSIONAL Modular Digital Workflow Products, visit www.kodak.com/go/prolab

Specifications

Compatibility: KODAK PROFESSIONAL DP2 Software and KODAK PROFESSIONAL HR Scanning Software are engineered to drive the KODAK PROFESSIONAL HR 500, HR 500 Plus and HR Universal Film Scanners, HR AutoStrip Gate and HR AutoSlide (HR Scanning Software only) Accessories. KODAK PROFESSIONAL DP2 Software and KODAK PROFESSIONAL HR Scanning Software LR (Europe only) are engineered to drive the HR Long Roll Accessory.

Ordering Information

Catalog Number
KODAK PROFESSIONAL HR Scanning Software. KODAK PROFESSIONAL HR Scanning Software LR. KODAK PROFESSIONAL HR 500 Plus Film Scanner. KODAK PROFESSIONAL HR Universal Film Scanner. KODAK PROFESSIONAL HR Film Scanner 35mm AutoStrip Gate Accessory. KODAK PROFESSIONAL HR Film Scanner 120 AutoStrip Gate Accessory. KODAK PROFESSIONAL HR Film Scanner Long Roll Accessory. KODAK PROFESSIONAL HR Film Scanner AutoSlide Accessory. See your Kodak representative for availability.

Eastman Kodak Company, 2004. Kodak and Kodak Professional are trademarks of Eastman Kodak Company. PPI 1058 Printed in U.S.A. CAT 831 9899

 

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