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plustekPhoto Scanner ePhoto Z300, Scans 4x6 inch Photos in 2 Seconds, Auto crop and deskew with CCD Sensor, Supports Mac and PC
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plustekPhoto Scanner ePhoto Z300, Scans 4x6 inch Photos in 2 Seconds, Auto crop and deskew with CCD Sensor, Supports Mac and PC

4.6/5
Product ID: 36132956
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Details

  • Media Type
    USB
  • Scanner Type
    Photo Document
  • Brand
    plustek
  • Model Name
    ePhoto Z300
  • Connectivity Technology
    USB
  • Product Dimensions
    6.3"D x 11.4"W
2 sec scan speed
💻Mac & PC compatible
📸600 dpi resolution

Description

📷 Snap, Scan, Share—Your Memories Await!

  • HIGH QUALITY IMAGING - Capture every detail with up to 600 dpi resolution.
  • USER FRIENDLY DESIGN - Simply insert and scan—no flatbed hassle!
  • SPEED MEETS EFFICIENCY - Scan a 4x6 photo in just 2 seconds!
  • IMAGE ENHANCEMENT POWER - Restore and enhance old photos effortlessly.
  • VERSATILE COMPATIBILITY - Works seamlessly with both Mac and PC systems.

The Plustek Photo Scanner ePhoto Z300 is a high-speed photo and document scanner that digitizes your cherished memories in just 2 seconds per 4x6 photo. With an optical resolution of up to 600 dpi, it ensures stunning image quality while supporting various photo sizes and formats. Compatible with both Mac and PC, this user-friendly device enhances and restores old images, making it the perfect tool for preserving your family's history.

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Specifications

Item Weight1.5 Kilograms
Item Dimensions D x W x H6.3"D x 11.4"W x 6.2"H
Color Depth24
Standard Sheet Capacity1
Paper Size4x6 inches
Optical Sensor TechnologyCCD
Light Source TypeLED
Connection TypeUSB
Resolution600 dpi x 600 dpi, 300 dpi x 300dpi
Wattage18 watts
Supported Media TypeUSB
Scanner TypeFilm, Photo, Document, Business Card
Minimum System RequirementsWindows 7

Have a Question? See What Others Asked

If your pictures still have a little adhesive on them or a small piece of tape on the back will it still work through the feeder?
What quality are the photos printed from a scanned picture? Is it good enough to print as 5x7 or even 8x10?
Do you have to use the Plustek software, or is this recognized as a scanner and you can use other scanning software?
I want each image to have its own label with date, location and peoples; can this be done?

Reviews

4.6

All from verified purchases

A**R

UPDATE after one full year of use. 5 GOLD stars out of 5!!

UPDATED REVIEW after one full year of use. Still 5 out of 5 stars. In fact, 5 GOLD stars out of 5 stars!!I decided to write this lengthy review because I often rely on detailed reviews here on Amazon and this product, the Plustek ePhoto z300 scanner is such a well-made, well-functioning, durable, and reliable scanner that I wanted to share my experience with others who might be looking for something to help tackle large-quantity photo scanning.The primary reason I purchased this scanner (the Plustek Photo Scanner ePhoto Z300) was to digitize boxes and boxes of family photos I've been carting around for the past 35 years or so. I have been the keeper of 'vintage' family photos going back to the late 1920s through the early 2000s, right up until most of my family members made the complete switch to digital photography. I have tried to scan these photos in fits and starts over the decades using fairly expensive flatbed scanners - the ones with slide and film adapters and high quality/high speed scanning ability, fancy software, etc. I usually got through a few dozen photos before the tedium set in and I would stop. The time in between picking it up again was often years later and I've had to purchase newer and better scanners to start again. As my older family members have gotten, well, much older over the years, I thought I'd better get these all scanned and distributed once and for all. My collection of photos included tiny black and white pictures of varying sizes and shapes from the 1920s-50s, up to the more standardized 4x6 sized 35mm photos of the modern era.I started this photo scanning project in March, 2023 and finished in May, 2023. That's with scanning them a few hours here and a few hours there, but sticking with it since this scanner was so easy to use and so fast. In those three months I scanned 12,915 photos with this scanner (my whole collection!). Every time you scan 50 photos it asks you to save them into a scanned photo folder (of individual photos). You could scan and save each photo separately, but this feature saved A LOT of time and grief. After I saved each 50-photos, I would open the scanner front and wipe the platen and rollers with the supplied lens cloth. This was necessary because most of my photos had fine-grained dust/paper mold particles on them from years of varying-quality storage. I didn't clean any of the photos before scanning, I just dropped them in the scanner and scanned them. I can digitally clean the ones I *really* care about at a later time. The vast majority of them are just fine the way they are. For photos with writing on the back, I simply scanned the front of the photo and after it scanned I flipped it over and scanned the back side. Every photo with text came out looking great and completely legible. That's all there is to the process and that was the only maintenance I had to do during the whole project.This scanner is very fast. About 2 seconds per photo You drop it in the top and it spits out the bottom and the digital photo pops up on the screen. This is in 300dpi mode, which was more than adequate for the type and quality of my particular photos. The 600dpi mode makes much higher quality (and larger size) scans, but the speed is reduced considerably. I only used 600 mode on a very few photos. The vast majority were at 300dpi and they all look great. Here are some general observations from this experience:1. I definitely recommend this scanner for this type of project. I have purchased four or five expensive flatbed scanners over the past few decades only to tire quickly of the opening, setting the photos, closing, waiting for the PC Twain feature to work (or not work, in some cases) and scan the photos - slowly, unload the flatbed, load the new 5 or 6 photos, close the lid (trying not to disturb the photo's positions), and repeating the process. Very laborious and slow.2. The software-hardware interface is very stable and reliable. When I've upgraded my operating system, installed patches or updates, and when I installed a new printer/scanner/fax machine for my daily use, the software for this Plustek ePhoto scanner remained unfazed and it worked like a charm every time. Even today, a year later, when I scanned a few docs for my taxes, it worked like a charm. I can't say that about the flatbed scanners I've had over the years. The TWAIN software for those scanners (and even my new printers) often goes crazy and I would need to reinstall some of the software and fiddle with it all to make it work. It was always very frustrating when I decided to sit down and scan a few hundred photos only to spend most of my time getting the hardware and software working right again after some PC updates, installs, etc. Those problems have not happened even once in the year that I've owned this scanner and I've upgraded from Windows 10 to 11, installed numerous patches and updates, and two new printer/scanners. This Plustek ePhoto scanner has worked like a champ through it all.3. Ease of use. You flip the switch to turn it on, the software automatically senses the powered-up scanner and pops up on your PC (or Mac) screen, you drop a photo (or document or ID card) into the front of the scanner, and two seconds later it's on your screen in 300dpi resolution. It's amazingly simple. Once you initially set a few simple parameters (e.g., file type, save location, quality, etc.), you really never need to do anything but drop photos into the top of the scanner and boom!, they show up on your computer. The only time you interface with the software UI after setting those parameters is when you scan your 50th (or fewer) photo. You'll press the 'Save' button to save that bunch of photos to your designated folder, and the window clears and is ready for the next batch.4. Thoughts on the lack of multi-photo feeder. I found this to not be a problem at all. I worried about that before purchasing it, knowing I had many thousands of photos, but I read reviews of even the top multi-loaders having problems with photos sticking together, misfeeds, misaligned feeds due to shape/size differences in the stack, etc. I took a chance on this one-at-a-time drop-in type scanner and I do not regret that choice one bit. Given the many different photo types, sizes, shapes, thicknesses, quality, condition, cleanliness (some photos had sticky edges, old smudges, dust, etc.) that I had in my large collection, I think I would have had far more trouble with trying to get stacks of photos to feed properly in a multi-feed machine. I never had a misfeed or any problem due to the large variability of my photos. Again, this scanner worked like a champ.5. Solid interface. The user interface (UI) is fairly robust for a non-professional system. It's simple enough to not require a lot of knowledge, skill, or time to set up and use, yet robust enough to provide most of the options you might need for a large scanning project like the one I had. I think the simple interface is one of the reasons it always works when I need it to and doesn't have difficulty interacting with my PC software once it's installed. The UI is simple and effective. It gets the job done more than adequately and does it without complication, confusion, or fuss. Some will argue the UI is not "modern," like the latest iPhone or Android platform OS. Of course it's not. It's not designed to be like them or to compete with them. It's also not Photoshop, or anything like that either. It's an interface to get your physical medium (photos, cards, documents, etc.) into a digital format, quickly and without drama. It works, and it works without difficulty. This scanner also takes up very little desktop space. It sits quietly and compactly next to my PC monitor with a small cover over it and when I need it I remove the cover, flip the switch, and drop in a document or photo and it magically appears on the screen. No fuss, no muss. It's brilliant! For the cover, I purchased this one on Amazon for $23. Well worth the money. (The Perfect Dust Cover, White Vinyl Cover for Epson Workforce DS-770, DS-575W and DS-530 Color Document Scanners, Anti Static Waterproof and Double Stitched Cover by: The Perfect Dust Cover LLC)6. Cost. This scanner cost me $199, shipped. I have spent ten times that over the years on medium-quality, consumer grade flatbed scanners that did not inveigle me to finish my lengthy project and they all eventually ended up in local thrift shops, with my project remaining unfinished. For years...7. Odd-sized photos or those items that cannot be dropped into this type of roller scanner. My collection contained a few dozen or so items that simply could not be scanned using this type of scanner. Some of the items were too large for the scanner's dimensions, permanently attached to things like in book form or permanently glued in photo albums (like some really old black acid-paper type albums), etc. Indeed, this scanner, and any roller-type scanner of this nature has its limitations with these sorts of items. I simply used my $89 Canon TR4200 printer/scanner/fax machine to scan those odd items. That cheap, slow, everyday flatbed scanner/printer unit is perfectly suited to scan 300dpi quality images from those bulky anomalies in my collection.8. In conclusion, this Plustek ePhoto Z300 scanner has been the one scanner (of many over the years) that finally allowed me to finish my family photo scanning project. Nearly 13,000 photos scanned in just a few short and painless sessions, without any technology dramas or dilemmas, and with very satisfying results. I have used computing and data processing hardware and software since the early 1980s and have experienced the good and the bad during that time (there's still plenty of bad...). I have zero negative things to state about this scanner. It really is a wonderful tool and can be wielded with relative ease by the vast majority of users.I hope you enjoyed this review and found it useful. I used this Plustek scanner just today for a few documents and it reinvigorated my appreciation for how good, quick, and reliable it is as an everyday tool and as a larger-scale project scanner. I'm sure I will be using it well into the future.Thanks for reading, and good luck with your purchase and your project!----------- Original Review ---------------Recent purchase and have only scanned a few hundred old photos but this scanner works amazingly well. Very fast scans (at 300 dpi) and easy 'drop in' functionality. Far faster then my flatbed scanner and the software it comes with is very decent for adjusting, rotating, cleaning, cataloging, etc. all the photos I've scanned. The scan quality is just as good as any flatbed scanner I've used over the years (consumer-grade, not professional grade). The whole thing is super small and lightweight, and very easy to wipe clean (the platen cover rotates forward and you simply wipe the strip of glass. Just launch the software and start dropping photos into the scanner one at a time. They scan in a second or two and fall out the front into a little pile. Could not be easier. The smallest old photos I've scanned are about 1.5" square and they scan just fine. Amazing!

D**H

pretty amazing

SIZEIt's a bit bigger than it looked in the pictures.SPEEDIt scans fast. I scanned 2 full shoe boxes of photos in 2 days, only for a couple of hours a day, 1200 photos.CONNECTIONI had an issue connecting it: it came with a USB cable but my Macbook only has USBC. It also came with a little converter USB to USBC - but it wasn't connecting. Then I used my own usb HUB converter and it immediately connected. So little converter it came with did not work with my macbook so keep that in mind if you have issues connecting. (see my photo)QUALITY:I scanned everything at 300 and am happy with the results. I had some old photos that had folds on them and those for some reason didn't always scan well. The scanner picked up the fold much more than I could see with my own eye. For those few photos I just took a photo of it with my phone instead. I used their editing on a couple of faded black and white photos to pump exposure / white balance. I am also using it to scan old artwork in case we ever lose it or it gets destroyed in a fire / flood with all the disasters happening on the daily now a days.SOFTWARE:software was easy to download for mac and windows (we used both) and it was easy to use. I saved everything mostly in 1 folder and will later sort all the images. They all had a default file name of the dateyou scanned: 2025-01-20-12-03-0013CONS:My main con is that I have a bunch of photos that have writing on the back, in another language which I cannot read. So I tried to scan both sides....some came out fully white so I couldn't scan it. And even those that did scan, I have no way to attach them to the original photo. And 1200 photos I'll never remember which photo that writing belongs to. Would love a feature for photos with writing...where it may add FRONT and BACK to the photo ? or even combine the 2 into 1 photo I am ok with that. so it would have a 2 part scan SIDE 1 SIDE 2 and then you choose whether it combines into 1 photo or if it names it with FRONT AND BACK. This is the only reason I took off a star but I'd still give it 4.9. This feature I think could be added later on if anyone reads this.Don't forget to back up all your photos to a cloud / share it with family so you all have a copy / ways to get to it. Our photos and memories are irreplaceable.I will put it on a google drive and share with family so they can have a copy. It feels amazing to finally have 30+ year old photos scanned!!! and no longer have to dig through boxes to find a photo.

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