Special
Focus
Book Scanners and Cradles: Links to Products and Reviews
Stephen
Chapman
Library Preservation
Harvard University
stephen_chapman@harvard.edu
Bookscanners
and book cradles for digital cameras are of tremendous interest to the
preservation community, which has a longstanding commitment to balance
materials handling concerns against quality and production cost requirements.
Given the tremendous variety among binding structures, sizes, and conditions
of books; quality requirements for reproductions; and project budgets,
it is unlikely that a one-size-fits-all solution will emerge. Thus, Harvard's
Weissman Preservation Center has posted pages on its Web site to define
functional
requirements for book copying systems (whether analog or digital)
and to monitor the commercial and custom-developed products that have
proven viable when neither flatbed scanning nor disbinding is an option.
The following table is reprinted with permission. Harvard welcomes comments.
| Book
Scanners |
Cradle
design |
Selected
projects |
Notes |
| 4DigitalBooks™
Digitizing
Line |
automatically
turns pages |
unknown
(as of 2/02) |
advertised
throughput of ca. 800 pages per hour |
| i2s
digiBook |
various
configurations with and without glass platen (like Zeutschel) |
Ransom Center
(Gutenberg
Bible), Library of Bordeaux, Library of Nantes
|
configured
in seven different models offering grayscale and RGB outputs, contact
the U.S. reseller, IImage
Retrieval, Inc. in Dallas, TX for more information |
| IBM
Research Pro/3000 Scanner |
customized
Linhof book easel (see below) |
Vatican
Library, Library
of Congress Federal Theatre Project collection |
Mintzer
report, which includes image
of easel (cradle); reported throughput of 80 images per day;
Pro/3000 used in other projects; see articles
at IBM site
|
| BookEye
|
book
must open to 180°, no glass |
METAe
(evaluation) |
Muhlberger
report notes, "Scanning bound books demonstrates painfully
that books are not made for being opened 180°," and that in practice
use of these cradles "can lead to broken bindings" |
| Minolta
PS3000 |
book
must open to 180°, held in place by operator's hands |
Internet
Library of Early Journals (ILEJ), 1997-99 |
ILEJ
achieved scanning throughput of 80-100 pages per hour (final
report, p. 27) |
| Minolta
PS7000 |
book
must open to 180°, held in place by operator's hands |
METAe
(evaluation) |
Muhlberger
report notes, "Scanning bound books demonstrates painfully
that books are not made for being opened 180°," and that in practice
use of these cradles "can lead to broken bindings" |
| PARC
Bookscanner |
90°
book cradle and wedge platen |
UC
Berkeley Digital Library project |
Steve
Ready, et al., A Bookscanner for Fragile Books, "A
Bookscanner for Fragile Books," Final Program and Proceedings,
IS&T's PICS Conference, 2001, 172-176. |
| Zeutschel
Omniscan x000 Book scanners |
various
configurations with and without glass platen |
GDZ,
HEDS |
See,
Tanner,
et al., Higher Education Digitisation Service: access in the future,
preserving the past - the UK perspective, p. 4. |
Publishing
Information
RLG DigiNews
(ISSN 1093-5371) is a newsletter conceived by the members of the Research
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