About ElarScan scanners
All types of originals in DIN A2, A1 and A0 sizes – from small objects to oversized documents, from flat maps, newspapers, notebooks and materials with a limited opening angle.
ElarScan scanners are optimized for the production of digital copies, creating digital collections of objects or elements, for scanning magazines or brochures, for any bound, bound or delicate archival materials, project documents, court cases, photo archives, bank reports, catalogs, drawings, posters. .. whatever.
The flexible cradle w with integrated automatic correction of images made in the shape of the letter V allows you to open books / folders at an angle of 120 ° and even 90 °.
Online image preprocessing with instant live preview – with the ability to create up to 20 separate images in one scan, including auto-formatting, multi-masking, page splitting and cropping, and much more. Scanners do not have a “pre-scan” option, the monitor shows the live image.
Fast and efficient: scanning takes only a second. ElarScan scanners use modern CMOS sensor technology with a single photo sensor for instant (millisecond) image capture.
You always see what you’re scanning – “planetary” means non-contact and from above. There is no need to turn the book upside down unlike flatbed scanners or MFPs.
ElarScan All-in-One scanners with built-in computer are immediately ready to work.
The integrated ScanImage software enables collaboration in a distributed network, provides a powerful range of filters and operations based on batch projects.
Automatic naming, multiple file formats, hot folders, background batch processing, barcode/revision code, metadata, job profiles, project transfer, and more are supported.
Rich in post-processing features, including image enhancements, corrections, saving to various file formats, including searchable multiPDF with OCRed text layer supporting 54 languages, etc.
Our experience, passed on in every ElarScan scanner produced, is the key to your success! For 30 years, ELAR has completed thousands of projects, annually from 30 to 100 million scanned pages. The total number of scanned pages is approximately 1,000,000,000 – a stack several hundred kilometers high – the height at which Earth’s satellites orbit.