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Comparison Canon DR-C225 vs Plustek SmartOffice PS283

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Canon DR-C225
Plustek SmartOffice PS283
Canon DR-C225Plustek SmartOffice PS283
from £699.99 
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Product typesheetfedsheetfed
FormatA4A4
Max. resolution600x600 dpi600x600 dpi
Technical specs
Optical elementCISCIS
Max. scan area216x356 mm216x356 mm
Colour depth (int.)48 bit
Colour depth (ext.)24 bit24 bit
Shades of grey256256
Mono scanning25 ppm25 ppm
Colour scanning25 ppm5 ppm
Operating cycle1500 page/day1500 page/day
Document autofeed30 page50 page
Slide moduleis absentis absent
Data transfer
USB
USB
General
Power sourcemains poweredmains powered
Power consumption13 W18 W
Dimensions300x339x235 mm263x128x148 mm
Weight2.6 kg1.66 kg
Added to E-Catalogoctober 2014november 2012

Colour depth (int.)

Under the internal colour depth is meant the number of shades of the image that the scanner itself can recognize; it should not be confused with external depth, which is the amount of hue transmitted to the computer (see below). Colour depth is expressed as the number of bits of information used to encode data about each colour. The total number of colour shades in this case is 2 to the power of n, where n is the colour depth. So, a 24-bit scanner recognizes 16.7 million colours — which is more than one and a half times more than the human eye, and quite enough for simple everyday tasks. In more advanced professional models, colour depth can reach 96 bits. Although the characteristics of the image transmitted to the computer are described by the external colour depth (which can be less than the internal colour depth), the internal depth, however, also affects its quality: other things being equal, a scanner with a higher internal depth provides more accurate colour reproduction.

Colour scanning

Colour scanning speed provided by the device. In fact, it depends on the selected resolution, colour depth and original dimensions; the characteristics most often indicate the speed for an A4 sheet at the minimum resolution and colour depth, i.e. maximum possible speed. If you only need to scan one or more sheets from time to time, high speed is not too critical, but for working with a large amount of materials, you should look for fast models.

Document autofeed

The maximum number of sheets of standard weight (80 g/m²) paper that can be placed in the scanner's auto feed system at a time. These systems are similar to those installed in printers: a stack of sheets is installed in a special tray, and each of them is fed in turn for scanning. It is worth paying attention to models with this function if you often have to work with numerous documents: you will not need to monitor the process and manually feed sheets — just load the originals into the automatic document feeder and press the button. Many document feeders, some flatbeds, and almost all combination scanners have an ADF (see "Type"). It works, however, only with separate sheets and cannot cope with larger media.

Power consumption

The maximum power consumed by the scanner during operation. The higher the power, the more energy the scanner consumes, but this only applies to the scanning process itself — in standby mode, power consumption is negligible. And even at the peak in most models, the power is so low that in fact this parameter has practically no effect on electricity bills and is more of an auxiliary value (for example, it is used to calculate the total power of devices connected to an uninterruptible power supply).
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