Subject: Scanners
Stephen Selby seeks information about scanning thread-bound Chinese books without braking the spine. We, at the University Library of Graz, Austria, are digitizing our tight-bound manuscripts using a special equipment, which I developed and built by myself. This equipment allows filming or digitizing manuscripts with nearly no stress for the binding. The Object lies on a book-cradle with an opening angle of approx. 150 degrees. Contact-free Digitization is done by a Nikon-camera with a Kodak-chip instead of the film. The occasional digitized page is lifted a little bit from the text block by hand and is then laid only at the edge on a thing we call "suction-arm". Now a very moderate air flow keeps the sheet in place and nearly flat. The point is (in my opinion), that the camera is mounted on a special mechanic in such a sophisticated way, that the digitization can be done with a minimum of distortion--regardless of the exact position of the "lifted" sheet. I hope that my (maybe a little awkward) description of our technology will help the colleagues in Shanghai. For the moment this equipment is only a prototype, but works very well since one year. *** Conservation DistList Instance 11:51 Distributed: Tuesday, December 9, 1997 Message Id: cdl-11-51-005 ***Received on Tuesday, 9 December, 1997