Wolverine F2D Super 20MP 4-In-1 Film to Digital Converter - 2024 report by Whydis
Wolverine F2D Super 20MP 4-In-1 Film to Digital Converter
Color:Yellow
Now you can take all those stacks of 35mm, 126, 110 Slides / Negatives and Super 8 movies and convert them into digital JPEG images to share and preserve them forever. Wolverine has created a very simple to use device to convert all yo...
The major negative is that the machine collects dust and small particles from the slides and they leave spots on each picture which need to be eliminated with the retouching feature as you edit and tag them on your computer
The copies turned out well and the machine is easy to use.
If your slides are in poor condition (I had a few), then this machine is difficult and frustrating to use
If your slides are in very good condition, then this machine works really, really well
The machine was really easy to use and the resolution was very good, so the digital files I now have to share are looking good
I would not recommend this device to anyone who is trying to get a true representation of their negatives.
Despite all of these caveats, I have no regrets: this device worked well enough for my shoebox full of old snapshot negatives
Well, the device is virtually useless, the images it renders are so poor that there is no way to use them in presentations or anything that requires and image size greater than 2x3 inches
The device works as promised with an easy to use interface
Wolverine is a terrific little scanning device for film and slides
Doing that will produce far better digital images of your slides than this device can.
It's so nice to have a device that will produce better quality images than the original prints that were made
I bought it to scan slides and negatives because I believed I could get better quality images from these image sources rather than 6x4 photos for which I use a sheet feed photo scanner
The scans produce sharp images from my negatives and slides that are about
Well, the device is virtually useless, the images it renders are so poor that there is no way to use them in presentations or anything that requires and image size greater than 2x3 inches
The color on older slides cannot be adjusted as well as I liked
From a design standpoint, the addition of a clear plastic cover to the feeder that totally enclosed the negative feeder and ensured the negative remained flat would remedy this potential issue.
The holder is light plastic and did break, but th manufacturer replaced it for free!
’s 20 slides).Make sure there aren’t any particles or specks of dust or lint inside of the machine and on the scanning lens as well as on your slides or they will show up on every slide scanned
The first one I tried was not great and reinforced my concern but decided to keep on going as I had hundreds of slides, so after a few I saw some were as clear as if they had been taken today with a digital camera.
resolution,very rapid processing time,not so perfect for exposure (some slide need correction)
It's a relatively slow, tedious process; I digitized ~4000 slides and negatives over about three months, a few hours at a time.
It's a slow process, but I'm beginning to get the hang of it
The process goes like this: first, you place the 8mm guide in the negative scanner tray, then feed the film through, then line up each individual frame and take a scan.
Making a slightest color/brightness adjustments is very time consuming and ruins otherwise speedy process
That said, a little dusting brush with a bulb attached to blow a gentle stream of air over your slides or negatives as you brush them goes a long way toward fixing one the most common issues encountered
Recommended: use compressed air to blow dust and hair off slides before scanning
Make sure you buy a can of "computer duster" spray -- you'll need it to clear any dust out of the device before you start using it, and to blow dust off negatives.
Too time consuming & difficult to keep dust and junk out of
Make sure you buy a can of "computer duster" spray -- you'll need it to clear any dust out of the device before you start using it, and to blow dust off negatives.
Most 35mm slides slide through the holder but every once in a while a slide gets crooked and requires the holder being pulled out to straighten the slide
The unit is well made but the negative holders seem flimsy
Very time consuming, and the holder was very difficult to open
The scanner sets up easily and the slide/negative holders work just fine
Scanning negatives is also very easy: you just use the appropriate holder and then slowly push the negative inside, center it, and scan it
35mm negative strips (of 4 or more frames) can be pushed/pulled through easily.
It gets on the images even if I clean every strip of negatives, and clean the unit every strip
My negative strips are 4 images each with NO blank space on either end
So very much faster than the old tray driven unit I was using - you manually feed the slides through the feeder, image scan time is very fast - you can easily scan 4 images on a negative strip in less than 2 minutes
Two negatives are that you can only save in JPEG, so no raw picture editing, and when you have short negative strips, they are tough to get through the device.
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More about Wolverine F2D Super 20MP 4-In-1 Film to Digital Converter
Color:Yellow
Now you can take all those stacks of 35mm, 126, 110 Slides / Negatives and Super 8 movies and convert them into digital JPEG images to share and preserve them forever
Wolverine has created a very simple to use device to convert all your film into to 20 Megapixels digital images in seconds
So simple to use, it only requires a push of a button
No computer or software is needed
Use it right out of the box to convert all your film by plugging it into an AC outlet or any USB port
All images are saved into its internal memory or optional SD/SDHC memory card, up to 32GB capacity
Easily connects to any Windows PC or MAC, to offload images or view on TV (TV Cable not included).