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Wolverine F2D Saturn Digital Film & Slide Scanner - Converts 120 Medium Format, 127 Film, Microfiche, 35mm Negatives & Slides to Digital JPEG - Large 4.3" LCD w/HDMI Output (Blue)

3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars 333 ratings

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  • Wolverine F2D Saturn Digital Film & Slide Scanner - FILM & SLIDES TO DIGITAL JPEG IN SECONDS – Powerful 20MP Wolverine Digital Film Scanner Converts Old 35mm, 127 Slides & Negatives, 120 Film Negatives (2.5" x 1.75", 2.5" x 2.5", 2.5" x 3.0", 2.5" x 3.5") and Microfiche to JPEG Digital Files
  • Powerful 20MP Wolverine Digital Film Scanner Converts Old 35mm, 127 Slides & Negatives, 120 Film Negatives (2.5" x 1.75", 2.5" x 2.5", 2.5" x 3.0", 2.5" x 3.5") and Microfiche to JPEG Digital Files
  • LARGE, BRIGHT 4.3” COLOR LCD – HD Built-In Color Display Features Adjustable Brightness. Easy Operation & Image Viewing and scanning.
  • HDMI Output jack to view images on TV/Monitor in High Definition.
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Important information

Visible screen diagonal

5" / 11 cm


Product Description

Wolverine F2D Saturn

Film & Slide to Digital Scanner

Turn film Negatives and Slides into digital files to save, share, or print with this Wolverine F2D Saturn Digital Film & Slide Scanner. The Saturn creates positive 20MP digital JPG images in a matter of seconds, making it possible to preserve and share historical treasures, cherished memories, beloved family photos, and more. Whether it’s forgotten film or overwhelming stacks of slides, the digital scanner makes scanning and uploading a breeze.

Wolverine F2D Saturn Film & Slide Digital Scanner
Wolverine F2D Saturn
User-Friendly Design

HD Screen and Push-Button Controls

Easily view and scan images on the extra-large, 4.3-inch, HD color LCD screen with the push of a few buttons—no computer or software needed. The Saturn provides single-pass conversions, and the exposure and color adjustment can be modified automatically or manually for ultimate convenience and control.

Wolverine F2D Saturn Film & Slide Digital Scanner
Convenient Versatility

For 120 Film and More

Specifically designed for 120 film, the Saturn expertly converts 120 (medium) professional film negatives in a wide range of sizes, including 2.5 by 1.75 inches, 2.5 by 2.5 inches, 2.5 by 3 inches, and 2.5 by 3.5 inches.

In addition to 120 film, the Saturn can also be used to convert 35mm and 127 slides and film negatives.

Fast-Loading Adapters

Each slide or negative takes only three seconds to scan into digital, and all adapters and inserts are included for quickly loading different film formats.

Wolverine F2D Saturn Digital Film & Slide Scanner
Wolverine F2D Saturn Digital Film & Slide Scanner
Scans 120 (medium) film negatives (2.5 by 1.75 inches, 2.5 by 2.5 inches, 2.5 by 3 inches, and 2.5 by 3.5 inches), as well as 135 (35mm) and 127 film and slide negatives
Max digital-image resolution 5472x3648 pixels (20 megapixels)
LCD screen Large 4.3-inch color screen
HDMI jack Allows for image viewing on a TV or monitor (HDMI cable required; not included)
Adapters included Unique adapters for fast-loading slides and negatives
Exposure and color adjustment Auto and manual
Convert method Single pass
Light source LED backlight
Card reader SD/SDHC/SDXC
Power source 5V DC
Interface USB to computers and HDMI to TV
Compatibility All Windows and Mac operating systems

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Wolverine F2D Saturn Digital Film & Slide Scanner - Converts 120 Medium Format, 127 Film, Microfiche, 35mm Negatives & Slides to Digital JPEG - Large 4.3" LCD w/HDMI Output (Blue)
Wolverine F2D Saturn Digital Film & Slide Scanner - Converts 120 Medium Format, 127 Film, Microfiche, 35mm Negatives & Slides to Digital JPEG - Large 4.3" LCD w/HDMI Output (Blue)
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Price$159.00$539.00$129.95-10% $179.99
List:$199.99
$119.99$399.95
Delivery
Get it as soon as Tuesday, Apr 2
Get it as soon as Tuesday, Apr 2
Get it as soon as Tuesday, Apr 2
Get it as soon as Tuesday, Apr 2
Get it Apr 1 - 4
Get it as soon as Tuesday, Apr 2
Customer Ratings
Easy to use
3.8
4.0
4.2
4.3
4.4
4.1
Colour balance
3.4
4.5
4.1
4.2
4.2
4.3
Picture quality
3.0
4.1
4.0
4.2
4.3
4.2
Value for money
3.9
4.2
4.3
4.2
4.0
Brightness
4.3
4.2
4.3
3.6
Sold By
Neptune Photo Inc.
Plustek Estore
GenCoDeals
DBROTH
ShopTronics
GenCoDeals
scanner type
Film
Film
35mm, 126, 110 Negative & Slides, Super 8 Films (Stills, no audio.)
Film
Photo, Film
Film
sheet capacity
10
1
8
8
connectivity tech
HDMI
USB
No computer needed. No software needed. Works Stand Alone.
USB, HDMI
USB, HDMI
optical sensor tech
CCD
CCD
CMOS
CCD
media type
Slide, Negatives
Slide
Download Images to SD Card (Included), Download to Your Personal Computer
Negatives, Slide
Negatives
Photo
resolution
20 Megapixels
7200
3200
22 Megapixels
300
1080P

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Wolverine

Wolverine F2D Saturn Digital Film & Slide Scanner - Converts 120 Medium Format, 127 Film, Microfiche, 35mm Negatives & Slides to Digital JPEG - Large 4.3" LCD w/HDMI Output (Blue)


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Customer reviews

3.9 out of 5 stars
3.9 out of 5
333 global ratings

Customers say

Customers like how easy it is to use the scanner. They say it has a good user interface and is convenient. They also like that it works great at what it does, producing reasonable good results. They are also satisfied with the speed. However, some customers are disappointed with the image quality, saying the photos are not that clear and have poor color reproduction. They feel the value of the product is subpar and the quality of the copy of negative is not very good. Customers disagree on quality.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

35 customers mention27 positive8 negative

Customers find the scanner easy to use and understand. They also say it has a good user interface and allows for large negatives. Customers also say the scanner is quick and convenient, and can batch process a ton of slides.

"...So glad I did! It is very easy to use (although it took me a minute to figure out how to correctly use some of the pieces) and I am happy with the..." Read more

"The good:1. Easy to use and reasonably good results. If the exposure of the original negative is good, then the result is also good...." Read more

"...scanner with the included brush so there's no dust in your scans, easy to use and fast, you manually feed slides in one side and they push thru to..." Read more

"...But the negative holder has no method of holding 120 negatives flat, and the image processing firmware in the device is just *AWFUL*...." Read more

26 customers mention21 positive5 negative

Customers like the performance of the scanner. They say it works great at what it does, is easy to use, and produces reasonable good results. Some say that it converts negatives to positives instantly. That said, most are happy with the performance.

"...and I am happy with the results. I would definitely recommend this!" Read more

"The good:1. Easy to use and reasonably good results. If the exposure of the original negative is good, then the result is also good...." Read more

"Works great converts negatives to positives instantly before you even scan. Does 120 negatives and 135 slides..." Read more

"...Not happy!!! While I am sure it works great for regular negatives, that was not what I needed it for...." Read more

9 customers mention9 positive0 negative

Customers are satisfied with the speed of the scanner. They mention that it is simple, easy to use, and fast.

"...the included brush so there's no dust in your scans, easy to use and fast, you manually feed slides in one side and they push thru to the other side...." Read more

"...The Wolverine is really quick and the scans are ok to quite good.Scanned 300 roll film negatives in an afternoon...." Read more

"...Digitizing an uncut roll of film, in any size, is incredibly fast. Much faster than is possible on the flatbed scanner...." Read more

"Very easy and fast to use. We digitised over 5,000 slides and negs so far...." Read more

27 customers mention12 positive15 negative

Customers are mixed about the quality of the scanner. Some mention that it scans so many sizes of negatives, and is superb at digitizing color slides and negatives. That said, some say that the scan quality was horrible, disappointing, and barely usable even for index scans.

"...Was very quick at scanning. May have to see if I am using it correctly??" Read more

"...The adjustments will only help a little bit.2. Scans 120 medium format, up to 6cmx9cm.The bad:1. NOT good for 135/35mm films...." Read more

"...It is a clever device because it's really not a traditional film scanner...." Read more

"...Scans as fast as you can insert slides or negatives. Scans to full size SD card." Read more

30 customers mention8 positive22 negative

Customers are disappointed with the image quality of the scanner. They mention that the photos are not that clear, have poor color reproduction, and have limited options to adjust image quality. The images on the viewscreen were a little rough looking, but the actual image once viewed on a computer looked terrible. They also mention that there was a slight difference in the resolution of the Canon capture and the actual scanned image.

"...The resolution was not enough. Definitely was not saved at the higher resolution that it claimed. Was very quick at scanning...." Read more

"...This was the early digital camera that recorded low-resolution, low-quality photos with a great deal of artifacting...." Read more

"...Scanned 300 roll film negatives in an afternoon.They look good for prints up to 8x10.Is it a high end drum scanner? Nope...." Read more

"...The Canon capture is slightly lower resolution, so it's not exactly the same size, but it's also zoomed to 200%, so you can compare the difference..." Read more

25 customers mention7 positive18 negative

Customers are dissatisfied with the value of the scanner. They mention that the quality of copy of negative is not very good, the holder is inadequate, and the construction is very cheap. Some say that the price of this unit is not worth it and is defective.

"...2. Grainy, yes the results are on the grainy side, but for my 120 films it's still acceptable on my 27" screen...." Read more

"...That's where the process falls apart...." Read more

"I saw this online and thought that it was a great deal for the money...." Read more

"...Overall observation: too expensive for such a cheap device." Read more

4 customers mention0 positive4 negative

Customers are dissatisfied with the compression of the scanner. They mention that the compression artifacts are really obvious, the settings invoke some kind of horrendously bad JPEG compression, and the images are small and horrible.

"...Second, the default settings invoke some kind of horrendously bad JPEG compression, which leaves ugly, obvious compression artifacts in the output..." Read more

"...but the compression is so brutal the images look all blurry and are barely usable even for the index..." Read more

"...Tons of noise and compression artifacts. Images are 2MB or less for "20 megapixel"...." Read more

"Yes, its easy to use, but all you get is a bunch of small and horrible compressed images. Nice paperweight though." Read more

4 customers mention0 positive4 negative

Customers are dissatisfied with the graininess of the scanner. They mention that the display is very grainy, and the digital print is not.

"...You can only get the full 20MP if you scan a 6cmX9cm 120 shot.2. Grainy, yes the results are on the grainy side, but for my 120 films it's..." Read more

"...All I got was a fuzzy mess. So if you are a genealogist like me, this device will not help you at all...." Read more

"It is hard to know what you are getting in a copy. Often the display is very grainy but the digital print is not...." Read more

"...ALL of the negatives were grainy. I read the other reviews and I have to totally disagree...." Read more

Super easy to use, but poor/disappointing image quality
3 Stars
Super easy to use, but poor/disappointing image quality
I've been going back & forth for a week now, trying to decide whether to keep this scanner or not. I'm very frustrated, because the hardware seems like it has a lot of potential for scanning my old 120 negatives & 127 slides, and it's the only device out there like it, capable of scanning such media. But the negative holder has no method of holding 120 negatives flat, and the image processing firmware in the device is just *AWFUL*. When you scan, don't use any of the built-in color manipulation settings. If you try and adjust colors or brightness in the device, all it does is chop bits off the existing 8-bit color space, leaving you with a degraded ability to fix the white balance or do other color post-processing once you get hold of the image. So it's best to just accept the defaults, and try to fix white balance afterward in post-processing. Second, the default settings invoke some kind of horrendously bad JPEG compression, which leaves ugly, obvious compression artifacts in the output image, and there's no way to turn it off or adjust it. It looks like the hardware is capturing a pretty nice raw image, which then gets destroyed by the awful firmware processing before saving the image where you can access it. I've attached a comparison image to this review. The image on the left side is the result of a wolverine scan at default settings, then imported into gimp, and auto white balance run. It's zoomed in 200%, so the compression artifacts are really obvious. The image on the right side is the same negative, placed on a light table, and shot with a Canon T8i, then run through the same auto white balance filter in gimp, followed by an invert. The Canon capture is slightly lower resolution, so it's not exactly the same size, but it's also zoomed to 200%, so you can compare the difference in processing and compression. Both came out of the camera/scanner as JPEG. There is detail there in the wolverine scan, which doesn't exist in the Canon snapshot due to its lower resolution, so I know the Wolverine hardware captured a much better image, but it's been ruined by the awful processing/compression in its firmware. I think this could be an incredible device with only a little more effort on Wolverine's part. For example, if the firmware would simply give the option to bypass all processing, and output a RAW image, I would be thrilled with it. Or even if it had a JPEG quality setting, so I could choose less compression, it would be a huge improvement. I'm hoping they will update the firmware, and provide a new version with some fixes. With fixed firmware, I think I would give this device 5 stars. The negative holder is still a problem, but one I can work around, especially in this price range.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on September 3, 2023
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Reviewed in the United States on February 12, 2021
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Reviewed in the United States on January 24, 2024
Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2020
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3.0 out of 5 stars Good for medium format film only!!!
Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2020
The good:
1. Easy to use and reasonably good results. If the exposure of the original negative is good, then the result is also good. The adjustments will only help a little bit.
2. Scans 120 medium format, up to 6cmx9cm.

The bad:
1. NOT good for 135/35mm films. The image sensor is 20MP, so even my 6cmX6cm square 120 negative was only using 2/3 of it (about 12.7MP). If you use this scanner to scan 135/35mm film, you will ended up roughly 5MP in total. You can only get the full 20MP if you scan a 6cmX9cm 120 shot.
2. Grainy, yes the results are on the grainy side, but for my 120 films it's still acceptable on my 27" screen.

The concept is very good and very easy to use, however, I wish they built it with a better image censor.
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6 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2021
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1.0 out of 5 stars A Clever Concept Ruined By Ignorant Firmware Design
Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2021
Let's start with a reality check: For less than $200, one can't expect a truly high quality film scanner, but it did seem reasonable to expect better quality than one might have found in 2001. Unfortunately, that wasn't the case for the Wolverine F2D Saturn digital film & slide scanner that can convert 35mm negatives and slides, 120 medium format and 127 format film, and microfiche to digital JPEG images.

I own a Plustek OpticFilm 35mm scanner, but it can't handle medium format film. I had hoped that, even with the anticipated low quality of the Wolverine scanner, it might produce acceptable images from the much larger negatives.

The quality of the images reminds me of what we were able to get from the Sony Mavica. This was the early digital camera that recorded low-resolution, low-quality photos with a great deal of artifacting. The quality was barely acceptable back then. Now it's unforgivable.

So is the Wolverine FD2 Saturn good for anything? Maybe, if you understand and are willing to accept the shortcomings.

It is a clever device because it's really not a traditional film scanner. Instead, it has what's probably the equivalent of a smart-phone digital sensor. Instead of waiting 30 to 90 seconds for a traditional scanner to process the image, the Wolverine captures the image instantly and displays it on a small screen. Pressing one more button writes the image file to the device's internal memory or to a secure digital card.

(1) That's where the process falls apart. Instead of processing the image as a lossless TIFF or even writing it as a high-quality JPEG image, the scanner writes and incredibly small file. When I scanned a 645-format image, the resulting file was just 2MB. The manufacturer claims the maximum scanning resolution is 4600 samples per inch, so the image should have been approximately 11,500 pixels by 8300 pixels and the expected file size would be more than 20MB and the dimensions were 5164 x 3876.

(2) The smaller physical file size would still have created a highly usable image if the manufacturer had chosen not to use such extreme downsampling that creates horrid artifacting. A 10MB JPEG would have virtually no visible artifacting. As a result of poor design choices, the images are fuzzy.

(3) Most people who purchase a device such as this will want it for 35mm negatives and slides. How well does it work there? It's even worse. The scanned image was 5480 pixels by 3652 pixels. That's about 2600 samples per inch, which is higher than the setting I generally use on the Plustek scanner. That device can scan at 7200 SPI, but doing so takes more than one minute per slide. I usually use the 1800 SPI setting on the Plustek because that drops the scan time to about 30 seconds.

(4) The Plustek can also save files in lossless TIFF format, which is what I use. At 1800 SPI, the quality of an image saved as a TIFF far exceeds that of the Wolverine's higher resolution coupled with the extremely lossy JPEG format.

(5) The Wolverine's artifacting loses all fine detail.
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21 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on December 30, 2020
Reviewed in the United States on June 7, 2023
3 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on January 12, 2022

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Cliente Amazon
5.0 out of 5 stars Ótimo scaner de negativos
Reviewed in Brazil on March 6, 2024
Mr C J
1.0 out of 5 stars I wouldn't give it a one star
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 3, 2023
Jay Scot
3.0 out of 5 stars Almost the only scanner that takes larger size negatives and slides
Reviewed in Canada on November 30, 2023
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Jay Scot
3.0 out of 5 stars Almost the only scanner that takes larger size negatives and slides
Reviewed in Canada on November 30, 2023
Update at the end after further testing.
Had to buy this one because all the other models I have are only for 35mm rectangular size slides or negs. You can put in the 35mm square slides that get cropped with the smaller units and it does not crop the pictures.
I had hundreds of BW 120 full size negatives and a few even larger. This should work well but there was no tray included that fit the 120 height. It only fit in the horizontal direction. So I had to modify one of the trays and cut the opening wider on both sides. Then it would fit my 120 negatives. it still required cropping to remove a large scanned area around each picture.
Cropping. Every picture scanned required massive cropping during editing. The scanner has a large number of scanned pixels, 5480x3652. So there is plenty to crop.
There are some color and brightness adjustments available during scanning. After a while you get kind of used to the two-handed clicking for every picture. However when comparing color balance to my two other scanners I find that even though the pictures have color and high resolution, I often found the color tints unacceptable. Generally I would say it has good high contrasts but a bit weak for a smooth gradiation in the midtones.
This scanner has a counter that numbers each scan. It never resets back to zero and this is good. No duplicate numbers in case you are moving photos to the same directory later.
I always scanned to SD cards and never tried the internal memory that uploads to the computer. I did try using the built in screen, and I also tried using the HDMI link to a HD TV. The external link would be nice if you had to show several people the photos. Eventually I got used to looking at the small monitor because the controls were nearby in the same view and I did not have to move my head to look at two different things.
Am I happy with the purchase? A bit expensive, but at least this box of negs is digitized and the plastics are now in the garbage. Satisfied yes.

UPDATE a few weeks later...
I decided to go back and rescan some 35 mm negatives I had scanned years ago on a cheap $80 scanner. After scanning about a hundred negs I compared the scans from the two units. Not even one scan done on this expensive model came close to matching the quality of scan I already had. Contrast was observed to be either too much blacks and too much lights or just missing the midtones altogether. I have no reason why a scanner should produce the blacks heavily and also the whites but not much gradience in between. So I am upgrading my review and saying that if you can use the smaller but cheaper units available you should do that as this unit is only for the desperate people who need larger format scans. But don't expect great results. I had to remove one star from my previous rating after the most recent tests.
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