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At 1200dpi I measured 102 seconds to scan, then another 12 seconds for the element to return to home. Times may increase due to your computer's ability to receive the data. Some some strange reason, scanning at 300dpi, my desktop computer saw the scanner start and stop all the way down the page, causing the scan time to be twice as slow as it should be. My notebook computer handles it at full speed.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I am using USB 2.0 (Fastest supported speed by the V39 scanner.) It takes about 1:15 - 2:00 for a 4x6 print @ 1200DPI. But if you arrange (3) 4x6 prints on the scanner glass and do a preview with the Epson scan software you can then crop each image so that the scanner will scan just those images and create a separate file for each image. This process, however, takes the same amount of time for each 4x6 print. So, altogether it takes about 3:45 - 6:00 to scan 3 4x6 prints arranged on the 8.5x11.7 scanner glass. I think this is pretty ridiculous. It would be way better if the scanner could scan all three prints in one pass and then separate them, rather than making 3 separate passes and scans. This project is going to take forever, but I think it'll be worth it.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Hi Michael, It depends on the speed of your computer and USB interface, and other scanner settings, but a 1200 dpi scan using the Perfection V39 will take about 1.5 to 2 minutes. Regards, Mark - The Epson Team.
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