To operate it, plug in the power (the scanner uses a widely available micro-USB to USB cable for power) either to an AC outlet or your computer, insert an SD card (this is where scans are saved), press the power button, select your film type, load the holder with your film, insert it and press the capture button. Even if you've never scanned film before, you can expect to be up and running in around 10 minutes. The biggest thing the Scanza has going for it is ease-of-use. One of the plastic film holders with 35mm slide. This is not for scanning a whole reel of 8mm film, this is specifically for scanning individual frames of 8mm or Super 8 slides. The 8mm/Super 8 option is misleading, though. There's no option for medium format, though you can scan 35mm, 110, and 126 formats as well as 8mm/Super 8. In terms of film format flexibility, the Scanza is. Pretty much everything is plastic and feels a little cheap in its construction quality. Opening the box you're greeted with HDMI, USB and video out cables, an AC adapter, user manual, the scanner itself (in bubble wrap below), a toothbrush shaped surface cleaner and a handful of plastic film holders. Works with: 35mm, 126, 110, Super 8 and 8mm formats. ![]() ![]() ![]() It wears the Kodak logo, but has no affiliation with Kodak Alaris, the company bringing back Kodak T-Max P3200 and Ektachrome. The Kodak Scanza is a simple, non-professional film scanner.
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