The New UMAX PowerLook 1100
David B. Brooks, October, 2000

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The UMAX PowerLook 1100 FireWire flat-bed scanner with film
scanning built-in.
Photos
© David B. Brooks, 2000
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To those familiar with the
UMAX scanner line, the new Power-Look 1100 appears quite similar to the
popular PowerLook III. It has many similarities, including the same configuration
with film scanning standard; 1200x2400 hardware resolution; 3.4 dynamic
range; and 14-bit input and output. This new UMAX PowerLook 1100 is also
a significantly improved and enhanced model; it now has a FireWire/IEEE-1394
interface providing fast scanner to host communication that can be plugged
in and turned on with your computer running. It requires no interface
adapter card for use with Macintosh G3/G4s and some iMacs, as well as
many of the newest PCs. In addition to increasing scan speed and convenience
of access, FireWire also supports connection to more than one computer.
The internal electronics of the 1100 have been upgraded, as well as the
UMAX Bit Enhancement Technology providing even sharper, more detailed
output.
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The UMAX MagicScan software driver interface is easily configured
to fit your workspace providing convenient access to the
tools you may require for scanning. The Enhancement dialog
has four tabs to adjust dynamic range, curve, selective
and overall color balance. |
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The UMAX PowerLook 1100 is
a letter-sized flat-bed with a well designed transparency illumination
scanner cover light included. UMAX provides a full set of substantial,
well designed film holders for all standard formats. It also supports
film scanning covering 8.5x10", which permits proofing an entire roll
of 36 exposure 35mm as well as 120 film in one scan. The 14-bit color
depth of both input and selectable output, along with a high 3.4 dynamic
range, assures top quality film scanning. The UMAX MagicScan software
driver also offers automated color adjustment, as well as full manual
control of all the primary dimensions of image quality for precise color
correction on the basis of an adjustable preview image size and resolution
that can be customized for any monitor configuration.
The UMAX PowerLook 1100 purchasing
options and pricing also make its well-balanced feature set a very good
value. The scanner may be purchased by those who already have an image-editing
software application they prefer to use, with just the UMAX magicScan
driver at a $999 price point. For those who do not have a professional
image-editing application, UMAX adds the full version of Adobe Photoshop
5.5 for just $400 more.
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The UMAX PowerLook 1100 is readily adept at proofing roll
film, with its 8.5x10" transparency scan area, making it
a natural for scanning and printing proof sheets of an entire
roll of 35mm or 120 film. |
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Using The UMAX PowerLook
1100.
I continue to hear frequent comments indicating people are still intimidated
by the complexity and difficulty of computers and digital photography.
This must be based on hearsay and assumptions from the past because setting
up, installing, and obtaining a first scan with the UMAX PowerLook 1100
was quite simple and easy. I'll admit the learning and practice required
to make finely tuned manually color corrected professional quality scans
is a bit of an investment in time and concentration, but even that gets
easier and easier. For example, in less than an hour after the box arrived
with the PowerLook 1100 I had several perfectly satisfactory scans made
with the image files saved to my hard drive.
One of the first things I did
with this new UMAX was to make proof sheets of the test film I'd just
had processed, Kodak's Portra and Supra films. In fact these films made
the process easier than ever. Placing an entire roll cut in six frame
strips on the UMAX scan surface, I just clicked on the scanner Negative
selection and chose the Kodak option, along with auto adjustment at 300dpi
resolution. After obtaining a preview image on-screen, I cropped to the
edges of the six film strips, and hit the Scan command button. A quite
well-adjusted image soon opened in Photoshop. I simply clicked on Page
Setup, setting it, and then clicked Print and my Epson Stylus Photo 1270
spit out a most useable proof sheet. In about 90 minutes I had all 15
rolls from the test shoot scanned and printed as proof sheets.
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The UMAX PowerLook 1100 has a set of specifications making
it a very good performer scanning medium and large format
transparency film images. It will also do well scanning
35mm slides and negatives for print sizes up to 5x7" or
image files for use on the web. |
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Before doing any serious film
scanning, I used the UMAX PowerLook 1100 with the Monaco EZ Color software
application to read and calibrate test prints made on fine arts papers,
to build custom profiles for printing. This worked seamlessly and provided
very effective profiles quite quickly and simply, making the test printing
I was doing concurrently with my work evaluating the scanner a more successful
effort.
With a good experience proofing
color negative films I was encouraged, and dug out a set of 120 Vericolor
negatives, portraits shot in available light. Although the Kodak film
term did not work as effectively with these older films, it did not take
any significant manual color correction after using the MagicScan highlight
and shadow eyedroppers to set the black and white points in the image.
Even some Agfacolor CN-17 negatives of even greater antiquity were within
a reasonable degree of good color correction with the same simple technique,
with just some minor Color Balance adjustment in Photoshop post scan.
The ISO 160 medium format version of Fuji Reala shot when it was first
introduced was more of a challenge, but no more so than Reala in 35mm
has been to scan with several different dedicated 35mm scanners. Black
and white negatives however, did not produce image results with smooth
tone gradations in the shadows. More on that in my section on LaserSoft
SilverFast Ai 5.02.
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The UMAX PowerLook's exceptional sharpness is a particular
advantage scanning black and white silver-base films. The
adjustment control of the scan values is significantly improved
providing unusually smooth tone gradations using the LaserSoft
SilverFast Ai software to run the scanner. |
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I moved on to some scans of
120 and 4x5 transparency films. This revealed that the 14-bit color depth
and 3.4 dynamic range combined with the scanner's good sharpness, produces
high quality image files. There was no problem in achieving an effective
color correction with a variety of different films, even the relatively
short-lived 120 Kodachrome, which tends toward overly contrasty subject
interpretations.
Evaluation And Recommendation.
The UMAX PowerLook 1100 is a very straightforward flat-bed with transparency
illuminator lid that's well built and easy to work with. The software
MagicScan software driver provided is also a pragmatic design and provides
a flexible interface and a full array of automatic and manual tools that
is hard to better in this price category of flat-bed scanners. The new
configuration and FireWire interface provide a much more convenient and
accessible tool for your personal computer, that is also very fast and
efficient to use. Up to its maximum hardware resolution, and particularly
under 1200dpi, the UMAX PowerLook 1100 produces particularly sharp scanned
images, with well-defined detail across the image brightness range. Although
not all personal computers have built-in FireWire support, especially
Windows PCs, I would still recommend this FireWire scanner if you are
running a current version operating system (necessary for the required
FireWire support), as the extra cost (about $125) of a FireWire interface
card is sufficiently modest to still make the UMAX PowerLook 1100 a good
buy.
For more information, contact
UMAX Technologies, Inc., 3561 Gateway Blvd., Fremont, CA 94538; (510)
651-4000; fax: (510) 651-8834; www.umax.com.
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LaserSoft SilverFast Ai
5.02 For The UMAX PowerLook 1100
About halfway through my test work with the PowerLook 1100 I received
LaserSoft's newly released Version 5.02 of SilverFast Ai software for
the scanner. With each new version upgrade LaserSoft has added immensely
to the power and ease of use of SilverFast, providing the most effective
access to producing professional quality scans with the equipment LaserSoft
supports. In this version for the UMAX PowerLook 1100, all of the corrections
made with the tools are instantly reflected in changes in the preview
in real time. I was immediately made aware that the UMAX supplied .ICM
for transparency scanning was off-target for this particular scanner.
So, using a 4x5 Kodak Ektachrome IT-8 target, I created a new, custom
profile for the scanner. This was then selected in the SilverFast options
dialog. There was an immediate and significant improvement in the color
matching reflected in the preview image. Then this precisely matched preview
was reproduced with a finished scan opened in Photoshop. This critical
color management refinement allowed making all of the color corrections
in SilverFast of the remaining scans in my test so no tweaking in Photoshop
post scan was needed.
Other new SilverFast features
include a slider to select how much auto color-caste removal should be
applied. The ability to output raw 14-bit data from the scanner and save
it to disk in a compressed file format like EPS and DCS is now supported.
For those who have transparency images which have in the past scanned
with noise and poor image detail in the shadows, SilverFast now provides
multi-pass sampling which reduces shadow noise and enhances dark image
detail.
LaserSoft SilverFast enhances
scanner performance and efficiency by providing a fully color managed,
programmable auto adjust, and powerful easy to use manual color correction
interface. It proved its worth to me by providing an effective ability
to scan black and white fine arts negatives and obtain sharply defined,
crisp detail and very smooth tonal gradations. These scans soon resulted
in prints superior to those made with great pains years before in a wet
darkroom. The SilverFast Ai 5.02 software for the UMAX PowerLook 1100
has a price of $299, and $399 with an IT-8 reference and profiling functionality.
For more information and access to a demo version of SilverFast and direct
sales of the software, call (941) 383-7496 or visit their web site at:
www.silverfast.com.
Technical Specifications
Hardware Resolution: 1200x2400dpi
Scan Method: Single pass, 10,600 element trilinear CCD
Scanner Speed: 9.6ms/line color, quality mode
Maximum Document Size: 8.5x11.7" reflective, 8.5x10" transparency
Dmax: 3.4
Scanning Modes: Color--24 bits per pixel, 42 bits extendible; Gray
Scale--8 bits per pixel, 14 bits extendible; Line Art--1 bit per pixel
Data Output: 14 bit (extendible)
Interface: FireWire/IEEE 1394
Dimensions: 21.3x13.2x6.5"
Weight: 26.4 lbs
Price: $999, $1399 with Adobe Photoshop 5.5 full version
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