> What chance of cleaning the lenses inside a Canon
> FS4000US Film scanner? This is an old unit bought
> used, but it looks as if an untidy spider has taken
> up residence inside . . .
Just take it apart and clean it. What can go wrong?
Isaac
> The list of things that can go wrong is quite lengthy. Some parts of a
> scanner may be precision aligned at the factory on an optical test jig;
> and when you "just take it apart" ... that alignment is lost (on a Nikon
> LS-2000, there are 4 screws that, if removed or even just loosened, will
> usually destroy the scanner). You have no idea how many people do not
> know how to work the ZIF connectors on "Flex Cables" (those thin, flat
> ribbon cables used in a lot of equipment). Also, on some scanners there
> are a LOT of "flex cables" and they tear VERY easily, they cannot be
> repaired, and in some cases replacements are either difficult to get or
> not available at all. I could go on, but the answer to "what can go
> wrong" is: LOTS OF THINGS. MOST untrained people who take these things
> apart without instructions do damage to them.
OP has a scanner that, by his own observation, is already no good
because there's a spider (and, presumably, its web) inside it; the only
thing he can do is make it better. It's just very unlikely that getting
the scanner open enough to clean out the webs will involve dismantling
the lens assembly (which I agree is probably not a good idea). IME most
of the other "precision alignments" you mention are effected by
precision designed plastic injection moldings, not tiny screws, and no
"optical test jig" will be needed now any more than it was when the
thing was assembled originally.
Besides, if you never try, how are you going to learn how to do things
like that when you really need to?
Isaac
Tim.
"Barry Watzman" <Watzma...@neo.rr.com> wrote in message
news:hamle7$e00$1...@news.eternal-september.org...
> The list of things that can go wrong is quite lengthy. Some parts of a
> scanner may be precision aligned at the factory on an optical test jig;
> and when you "just take it apart" ... that alignment is lost (on a Nikon
> LS-2000, there are 4 screws that, if removed or even just loosened, will
> usually destroy the scanner). You have no idea how many people do not
> know how to work the ZIF connectors on "Flex Cables" (those thin, flat
> ribbon cables used in a lot of equipment). Also, on some scanners there
> are a LOT of "flex cables" and they tear VERY easily, they cannot be
> repaired, and in some cases replacements are either difficult to get or
> not available at all. I could go on, but the answer to "what can go
> wrong" is: LOTS OF THINGS. MOST untrained people who take these things
> apart without instructions do damage to them.
Thanks for practical advice: plan now is:
1. Vacuum slide scanner from outside (and operate and store it in as
dust-free a location as I can manage.)
2. Continue scanning slides (from the 1960s, many unseen for
decades, half badly faded)
3. Test Photoshop on a couple of well-chosen samples,
including those with dust/spider marks.
4. If this cleanup remains unsatisfactory, then I shall take off
the cover to assess interior components.
>The list of things that can go wrong is quite lengthy.
<snipped list>
Resulting in... A broken/useless scanner.
Since the scanner is starting out useless, what's the harm?