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Plustek OpticPro A320E - A3 CCD Sensor Flatbed Scanner, 12' x 17' scan Area with 7.8 Second Speed. Windows,Mac, ICA & Twain Compliant.

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$649.00

$ 99 .00 $99.00

In Stock

About this item

  • [PROFESSIONAL LARGE-FORMAT SCANNING] - up to 12"x17" scan area , allows you to quickly and easily scan A3-sized and wide-format paper such as maps, drawings, or large bound books and even odd-shaped articles.
  • [EASY FILE MANAGEMENT] - With Doc Action, you easily scan and save to different file format. It also provides quick access to post-scan destinations, including scan-to-print, email, Windows Public Folder, FTP Web Folder. OCR function can enables searchable content on your scanned PDFs for greater productivity.
  • [BATCH SCANNING] With A320E, you can scan multiple printed images at one time and save to a Multiple PDF files to a PC or Mac.
  • [TWAIN and WIA support] - Industry standard TWAIN drivers ensure compatibility with your software.
  • [Windows, Mac and Linux] - Support Windows 7/8/10/11 (64 bit version only), Mac OS X 10.13 to 13.x . User can download the latest version on Plustek website. For LINUX and SANE driver, please ask seller before purchase



Product Description

OpticPro A320E

Digitize Color and Stereoscopic Object

OpticPro A320E

A large-format scanner for graphic arts and textured designs

Plustek OpticPro A320E Art Scanner

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Compare Plustek Flatbed Scanners

Scan Area 12" × 17" 12" × 17" 11.69" x 17 8.5" x 11.69" 8.5" x 11.69" 8.5" x 11.69"
Image Sensor CCD CCD CIS CCD CIS CIS
Optic Resolution 800 dpi 1600 dpi 1200 dpi 1200 dpi 1200 dpi 600 dpi
Speed (300dpi,Color) 7.8 sec 7.8 sec 8 sec 3.6 sec 3 sec 26 ppm/ 52 ipm
Dimensions 24.53" x 15.75" x 5.51" 24.53” x 15.75” x 5.51” 23.18" x 16.02" x 2.67" 19.3" x 11.4" x 4" 16.3" x 10.4" x 1.4" 16.45" x 12.83" x 4"
Net Weight 16.52 Lbs 16.52 Lbs 9.52 Lbs 7.6 Lbs 3.9 Lbs 8.77 Lbs
Suitable for Magazine / Book Scan Art / Painting Digital Document / Blueprint Digital Magazine / Book Scan Document / Book Document / Book
  • If you want a scanner that captures larger tonal and color ranges for sharp details, CCD is the clear winner. It has more depth of field with more even and brighter illumination, whereas CIS falls off rapidly. However, CIS is relatively inexpensive.

  • Scanners need to be calibrated when first activated. This process keeps the scanned images sharp and colors accurate. It’s recommended you recalibrate it to avoid vertical lines and achieve the best results after using the scanner for a long time.

  • Please download the latest driver package for Windows/MacOS from Plustek official website and run the installer following the steps on your screen. For any hardware and software questions, feel free to get in touch with us.

  • A320E has 7 buttons (Custom 1, Custom 2, Email, OCR, File, Copy, Scan) to help you scan and send image data to a target application with a single press of the button. Configure the buttons based on your needs with DocAction software.

  • Go to file utility, check "Continuous Scan" and then press "Apply" in the settings of button configuration. If you'd like to learn more, please watch Plustek DocAction tutorials on Youtube and follow the instructions.


PhilC
Reviewed in Belgium on March 1, 2025
scanner respectueux des dessins originaux.
J A BIRNIE
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 21, 2024
Worked straight out of the box, thought I might have issues with connection to my MacBook Air as had to use a third party USB-B to USB-C cable as MacBook only has USB-C connectors, no worries with that as connected seamlessly with no problem and produced an excellent A3 coloured pencil drawing scan at 600 DPI with my first attempt.Reproduction was impressive with excellent clarity and resolution, early days yet but so far very impressed with the Plustek A320E.Driver and software downloaded from Plustek rather than using the DVD provided.
Randy S. Miller
Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2024
I am using this to scan documents for family history and a research project, and the ease of operation is great. I bought it for the size of the bed for oversize documents and it has worked perfectly.I did have a small issue with set-up and jumped on a live chat with tech support - solving the problem in less than 5 minutes.
Cheryl Lynn Sharp
Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2023
I've had it about 2 weeks and I've been putting it thru all the paces! It's quick, accurate and simple. I'm attempting to digitize 40 years of family photo albums along with various other family mementos for safekeeping. My album pages look great (and don't require further cropping unless I go back to eliminate the hole punches), Easily scans up to the 12x17 it advertises and for larger than 12x17 just 2 scans and PhotoShop photomerge create 1 excellent image! This was exactly what I needed at a cost I could justify. Customer support even has an online chat option for quick answers.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2023
I bought this in April 2022 and did not have a chance to set it up and use it until today (07/07/2023). I bought it to scan all my families photo albums (50+ albums) without having to scan each picture individually. From reading other reviews and comments, I read the instructions carefully and was able to set it all up and started scanning. So far, I am very happy I made the investment and bought this scanner
Matthew Grant
Reviewed in the United States on July 19, 2022
I returned it after testing it for a day or so. I'm a graphic designer and illustrator. This is going to be a long story, but if you really want the lowdown on this scanner from a non-casual person, this is my story.Been needing a large format scanner for some time, but the cost is prohibitive. I'm not sure why, other than I guess low demand. I have an epson I paid $100 for that does spectacular scans at 8.5" x 11", but for double that area, epson wants three grand. I can't swing that, so I started looking at some of the... I guess you'd say "Brand X" options. Reviews are hard to go by, and there's not a lot of people independently reviewing these showing examples of their work (eg - youtube reviews). So, I took the plunge, hoping for the best.Plustek seemed like the "better" of the two brands I found on Amazon. According to their own marketing the CCD scanning element is better for artwork color accuracy and detail (which is what I'm after). SO there's this one at 500ish dollars, and the next one up at 1000. The difference being that this one tops out at 800dpi while the other does 1200, I believe. I only need 600dpi, this was already a splurge, so it seemed to make sense to get this one. Right? Why pay double for a feature I didn't need.SO you're like, enough of your life story, what happened? Okay I'll tell you. I got the scanner. Set up was a snap. For sure, the disk provided set up whatever drivers and software etc. needed with no issues. The software itself is pretty meh. It's designed so that you're basically setting up what the buttons do, and they expect you to push the buttons, rather than open up software and hit scan. That's okay I guess. Worth noting you can use VueScan if you're not pleased with their software interface or want to rely on pushing physical buttons. I experimented with both.MY big concern going in was, how does this handle color. I wanted to make sure that low contrast gradients, etc are not blown out. On that tip, I found it does okay. Color was not terrible. Not as good as my epson. It also does this thing where it assumes the white paper is the base white and makes it WHITE (my epson, you can actually see the paper... the grain, the texture, here you just get white). I think this results in the blow out of some almost white colors. I could not figure out how to over come this, either with the settings in their own software, or the advanced settings in vuescan. I was in the midst of wrestling mentally about whether or not I could live with this issue, when I made the startling discovery that lead to me to return the scanner.Essentially, I scanned the same thing on my epson, this plustek, and then also an ancient cheapo brother scanner that I also have, and i was comparing the color between all three to get a good idea of where this lands compared to the others. All settings the same, I scanned it at 600dpi. In doing so, I zoomed in really close to some line art I had colored. This is where I made a startling discovery. This scanner was not, in fact, scanning at the resolution it claimed to be scanning. Either that or it's profoundly terrible at scanning. Basically, when I zoomed into 100% instead of the crisp edged lines that my other scanners provided (including the cheapo brother scanner), the linework was blurry! If someone were to send the scan to me professionally and tell me it was a 600dpi scan, I would tell them they were lying and that they had scanned at a lower resolution and scaled up the resolution using photoshop of something similar. It is that blatant.Long story short, I do not believe that this scanner can actually scan at 600dpi (let alone the 800dpi it claims). It appears that it scans at a lower resolution, and uses software interpolation to up-res the final image. Again, I cannot prove that is what is happening, but that is certainly what it looks like (which is bad enough). In any case, that is completely unacceptable to have that appearance on a scan. I have no use for blurry scans. If you read the reviews, I am not the only person to report this. Thankfully Amazon honored my return, as this was quite a risky splurge on my part.Now I'm at an impasse - do I go for the more expensive Plustek? Try another brand? Give up? I don't know, but I certainly cannot recommend this scanner to others.
W. D ONEIL
Reviewed in the United States on February 7, 2021
This replaced a Plustek OpticPro A320L which broke down within a few weeks of use. The two are apparently identical except that this A320E uses a Toshiba 800 dpi imaging element in place of the A320L's Sony 1600 dpi element. I don't need more than 600 dpi and the Toshiba element appears to deliver high quality scans so for the difference in price the A320E is very attractive for me.The scanner has a row of "One-touch scan" buttons on its right edge which in principle are a very nice idea. But the DocAction/MacAction software that programs their functions is seriously inadequate, which makes them all but useless at least for my purposes. For instance, one common task for me is to scan successive pages into my ABBYY FineReader software for batch editing and OCR. But DocAction offers no way to do this; it insists on starting a new instance of FineReader for each new page. Another common task is scanning outsize art. But for that it is best to use VueScan, which needs to control the scanner itself. So the buttons are a good idea whose bad execution deprives them of value.I did have a little difficulty in installing the scanner under Windows 10. I was able to resolve the problem straightforwardly with the aid of Plustek's excellent online chat help.To illustrate the scanner's capabilities I attach two scans. One is a standard color and grayscale target. Here it can be seen that the scan quality if very good, if not quite outstanding. The other is of a very difficult object, a 14kt gold watch, wrapped around a towel roll. Scan bar motion is right to left and resolution is 400 dpi. Note that only the watch's crystal is actually in contact with the scanner glass.Aside from the disappointment of the one-touch scanning buttons and a little residual worry regarding reliability (based on my sad experience with the A320L, whose mechanism is very similar) I am satisfied that this scanner will meet my needs well, at a relatively modest price.
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