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Perbedaan Scanner CIS dan CCD?
Kebanyakan scanner menggunakan type sensor CCD (Charge Coupled Device). Unit ini menggunakan lensa optik, seringkali seperti lensa kamera dan sistem cermin, untuk memfokuskan gambar ke sel CCD. CCD adalah perangkat analog, juga membutuhkan A/D converter chip (analog ke digital). Semua ini menambah biaya besar dan ukuran, tetapi flatbed scanner kebanyakan menggunakan sensor CCD untuk kualitas gambar terbaik (noise rendah, jangkauan dinamis yang baik, dan keseragaman warna).
Scanner yang berukuran compact dan Tipis menggunakan chip yang sangat berbeda, yaitu CIS (Contact Image Sensor). Unit CIS ini lebih kecil dan murah, tidak memiliki sistem optik (tidak ada lensa, cermin, lampu, dan tidak ada A/chip D). Chip CIS sering memiliki sumber cahaya LED yang terintegrasi dalam chip sebagai sensor. Sensor CIS mempunyai ukuran penuh sampai meluas ke seluruh bidang kaca scanner. Ini berarti bahwa jarak diatas kaca scanner, apa pun yang tidak benar-benar menyentuh kaca dan terlalu jauh hasilnya menjadi tidak tajam, dalam hal ini CIS scanner tidak cocok untuk pemindaian objek 3D. CIS juga digunakan dalam scanner sheet-feed seperti pada mesin fax dimana kedalaman sensor dokumen bukan menjadi faktor utama.

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Selling HD
HD means…
+ Flexibility
+ World Class Image Quality
+ Return on Investment
+ How do we offer all of this?
+ Not just nice colors!
+ Speed, xDTR
+ Resolution
+ ATAC, AWD, ALE…
+ LED or Fluorescent lamp
+ The best CCD scanners available, no exceptions.
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Selling SD
SD means…
+ Easy to Use
+ Quality
+ Value for Money
+ New design platform
+ Customized CIS technology
+ Lightweight, rigid and durable design
+ Speed, xDTR
+ 1200dpi sharpness
+ The best CIS scanners available, no exceptions!
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Product Positioning
Project: Re-define our market segments
Current: (document type)
+ Technical
+ AEC, Mechanical, CAD
+ GIS, mapping
+ Government, Map scanning
+ Graphics
+ Sign, Graphic Arts, Fine Art, Photo
+ Other
+ Textile, etc.
+ Reprographic, Copy Shop
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Product Positioning
Overall Positioning Statement
+ SD large format scanners give companies an easy and affordable way to save time on in-house scanning activities.
(When your company needs speed and affordable quality)
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Flexibility: Selling Points
- Featuring ATAC for thick/rigid documents. AWD for fragile or old media. 48-bit color for photo detail.
- Hi-speed interface, sharing over LAN, and wide-range printer support.
- Key technologies like ALE are key selling points to industry professionals who know wide format imaging.
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Image Quality: Selling Points
- On-board image processing and enhancement.
- Stable platform using proven CCD technology.
- Patented automatic image correction and closed-loop copy calibration produces results better than the original.
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Quality: Selling Points
- True 1200dpi optical resolution captures fine lines and detail on technical documents and maps.
- New Auto-Thresholding cleans background and adds contrast to old originals.
- Built to last – designed to handle 2 million scans. Extensive QA testing.
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Product Positioning
+ What: Top-quality imaging products designed to meet the needs of industry professionals who depend on image quality on a flexible range of document types.
+ Who: High-volume color-sensitive reprographics and scanning service providers. Graphics and Photo, some GIS professionals.
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Product Positioning
+ What: High quality scanning products designed to provide companies with affordable and simple wide format scanning and copying, in-house.
+ Who: A/E/C firms and GIS-related industries, including government – customers scanning primarily technical documents and maps.
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Product Positioning
+ CCD Technology ideal for color-sensitive, high detail, photographic quality
+ 48-bit, 4-channel CCD for photo-realistic detail and color accuracy
+ Special needs for size (different models) or for added flexibility (thick documents) call for HD.
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Product Positioning
+ CIS technology optimized for technical documents and maps
+ 1200dpi providing incredible sharpness and detail on line drawings
+ Designed as a productivity scanner, primarily for technical documents scanned in-house.
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Product Positioning
+ CCD Technology
+ High Quality Fuji Lenses
+ 600dpi optical resolution
+ Color-matched fluorescent lamp
+ Face-down scanning
+ Hardware image processing
+ 3.0ips color speed
+ 12.0ips mono speed
+ Energy Saver (Contex)
+ 36, 42, 54-inch models
+ Thick or thin documents
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Product Positioning
+ CIS Technology
+ Custom developed CIS modules
+ 1200dpi optical resolution
+ Red, green, blue LEDs
+ Face-up scanning
+ Software image processing
+ 3.0ips color speed
+ 10.0ips mono speed
+ Energy Star compliant
+ 44-inch
+ Thin scanning only
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Selling Against the Competition
Selling HD
+ Not just nice colors!
+ Speed, xDTR
+ Resolution
+ ATAC, AWD, ALE…
+ LED or Fluorescent lamp
+ Thick Document support
+ The best CCD scanners available, no exceptions.
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Selling SD
+ New design platform
+ Customized CIS technology
+ Lightweight, rigid and durable design
+ Speed, xDTR
+ 1200dpi sharpness
+ The best CIS scanners available, no exceptions!
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CCD or CIS: The Technology Decision
CCD Technology
Most high end large format scanners use CCD technology for their optical system. The Charge Coupled Device (CCD) converts light on its surface into electrical signals. Color filters for red, green and blue on three consecutive rows of CCD elements provide a very high color gamut, which is typical for CCD scanners and cannot be reached with CIS type scanners. The illumination system for a CCD scanner usually consists of two fluorescent lamps which have a significant warm up time and require frequent recalibration because their light output varies with temperature, time and sometimes even the mains voltage.
The fact that there is no lens or CCD available to capture 36" wide documents at high resolution all at once leads to another downside of CCD scanners, commonly referred to as "stitching". The scanner has to be recalibrated on a regular basis because it consists of three or four independent CCD subsystems, each having their own lenses and mirrors. During this process, a high precision test target is scanned and the offset in the horizontal and vertical direction between the individual cameras is measured. These values test target is scanned and the offset in the horizontal and vertical direction between the individual cameras is measured. These values are later used to "stitch" the three or four images from the individual CCD together.
Benefits of the CCD technology are:
- Exceptionally large color gamut.
- High resolution with no color artifacts due to real RGB pixels.
- High depths of focus simplify document transport requirements.
- Fast because of small chip size.
The disadvantages are:
- Frequent calibration needed to compensate for the change in illumination.
- Geometric distortion has to be calibrated regularly.
- High quality optical components such as lenses are expensive.
CIS Technology
Entry level large format scanners use the CIS technology. The CCD is combined with a 1:1 Selfoc lens at a very close distance and an LED-based illumination system, all assembled into a compact module. These modules are quite inexpensive and are produced in very high quantities for the flatbed consumer scanner market. Some large format scanner vendors use four or five of these modules mounted side by side to achieve a scanning width of 36" or even more. Stitching effects and geometric distortion are far less significant because of the 1:1 optical system and the fixed distance between the individual modules. This is not true for scanners that have CIS modules staggered in the transport direction. Because of the large distance between the individual modules, which can be up to 1000 lines apart; stitching becomes dependant on the properties of the document and also requires a very stiff transport system.
LED illumination typically has no warm-up time but introduces some color artifacts because LED illumination systems typically consist of a red, a green and a blue LED that are each switched on for the duration of 1/3 of a scan line. This produces colored edges on black and white originals because each color image is taken from a slightly different position. The color gamut is also significantly lower because color filter technology, as used in CCD sensors, is much more advanced than the color balance possible with LEDs.
The depth of focus of CIS sensors is very small, usually a fraction of a millimeter. Therefore, it is mandatory to press the original document against a glass surface; resulting in all of the issues that one can easily imagine; dirt, dust and scratches all degrade the image quality and can harm the original.
Benefits of the CIS technology are:
- If mounted side to side, very little geometric distortion.
- Stable illumination system, little recalibration necessary.
- Smaller and cheaper designs possible.
The disadvantages are:
- The real color resolution is significantly lower than listed.
- Reduced color gamut.
- Limited depth of focus.
Image Access has evaluated both technologies in great detail. As a result we have designed a new scanner family which uses the high color fidelity, high speed CCD technology and overcomes its disadvantages compared to CIS.
Depending on the scanner model, three or four CCD cameras and their optical components such as lenses, mirrors, etc. are mounted into one ultra-stable camera housing to avoid stitching errors introduced through thermal expansion of the scanner and its mounting parts. The patented process of calibrating out the remaining stitching offsets before every single scan makes stitching a "on issue" for the user. There is no reference target or stitching procedure necessary, a great relief for many users.
Conclusion
There are heated arguments about CCD versa CIS technology in the large format scanner business. The same arguments are used for each of the two, depending upon the technology favored by the respective author or vendor. Many of the articles and advertisements we have read recently contained both misleading and incorrect statements. We read things like:
"CCD supports a wider color gamut/bit depth, capturing 48bit color compared to 24bit color for CIS, and this is why CCD is used in today's digital cameras."
Even a non-technical user will instantly come to the conclusion that the A/D converter's resolution has nothing to do with the source of the signal. Both technologies produce an analog output signal that will be digitized in a later stage through the A/D converter. This can have any resolution between 8 bit and 48 bit but is independent of the CCD/CIS sensor.
The last sentence in the above statement has the highest score in nonsense we have found yet. Why would anyone in the world even consider using a Contact Image Sensor with a maximum focal distance of less than one millimeter and a picture size of 1 by 2000 pixels for a digital camera? This logic remains the secret of its author.
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CIS vs. CCD Technology
UNDERSTANDING SCANNER TECHNOLOGIES
CCD or CIS?
When purchasing a scanner, there are basically two choices with regards to technology – CIS (Contact Image Sensor) or CCD (Charged Couple Device). A scanner consists of a light source, one or more image sensors and a lens system. This is true for both CIS and CCD scanning technologies.
Contact image sensors (CIS) are in near contact with the image while scanning the document. The CCD (charged couple device) requires a much longer focus distance, usually obtained through folded optics directing the light path through a series of mirrors.
CCD method (optical reduction method)
Light from the light source is reflected by the document’s surface. This light is reflected further by a mirror, directed through a lens, and received by the CCD. Since the CCD reads light reduced by the lens, this method is called the “optical reduction method”.

CIS method (contact image sensor method)
The light from the three RGB color LEDs used as light source are reflected by the document. This reflected light is received in turn by the CIS sensor, which performs the actual scanning. The LEDs, lens, and sensor are integrated into a single module. Since these components are all rods of the same length in close contact, this method is called the “contact image sensor” method.

Which to choose? It depends on what you are scanning, and how much scanning you are doing. Generally, a CIS scanner is considered to be better for technical documents (CAD, AEC, GIS, Maps, Government, and Utilities) because it is able to reproduce fine lines, small type and minute details. It is also most likely the preferred solution for high-volume scanning as it provides higher throughput, and requires no warm-up time.
A CCD scanner is often used in the graphic arts arena to scan photographs, renderings, posters, and other items with the need for high/true color reproduction. CCD scanners generally are available in larger sizes, including flatbed scanners that are often used to scan fine art.
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