Tuesday, January 21, 2014

For Sale EPSON WorkForce Pro GT-S50 Document Image Scanner 48 bit Color - 16 bit Grayscale - 600 dpi Optical (#GTS50)

EPSON WorkForce Pro GT-S50 Document Image Scanner 48 bit Color - 16 bit Grayscale - 600 dpi Optical (#GTS50)

EPSON WorkForce Pro GT-S50 Document Image Scanner 48 bit Color - 16 bit Grayscale - 600 dpi Optical (#GTS50) Review


Scanner with 1200 sheets per day duty cycle.


Price : $382.98
* Get the best price and special discount only for limited time



EPSON WorkForce Pro GT-S50 Document Image Scanner 48 bit Color - 16 bit Grayscale - 600 dpi Optical (#GTS50) Feature


  • New - Retail
  • 1-Year Warranty
  • Epson B11B194011
  • EPSON WorkForce Pro GT-S50 Document Image Scanner 48 bit Color - 16 bit Grayscale - 600 dpi Optical (#GTS50)






Maybe you should visit the following website to get a better price and specification details

Costumer review

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
5I absolutely love this thing
By Ted
I absolutely love this thing. I scan all my bills, documents, receipts, etc. and keep them on my hard drive in .PDF format. I attach receipts to invoices and scan them. I write reference numbers and payment info on all my house utility invoices. I scan appliance manuals, alarm instruction sheets, automatic timer settings, my son's Lego instructions all to .PDFs. They are all kept in a single folder on my hard drive, all categorized. I must say it is so much easier to navigate a folder to find important information than using hard-copies.

I originally bought the receipt scanner NeatReceipts which was painfully slow. The Fujitsu looked a lot less sturdy, so the Epson won the decision. It scans fast even at 600dpi. It also scans both sides of everything I throw at it.

It's a handy little unit that quickly "folds" up nicely on my desk when not in use (cover folds over the paper feeder, exit paper path slides in to hide).

The only problem I have with this little time-saver, is that the exit tray does not seem to "catch" paper correctly. Instead of a neat pile of papers like in a laser printer, these tend to catch on each other when exiting the unit (not to snag in the unit, but does not produce a nice pile of papers after scanning) - will not hamper the operation.

On my Windows PC the resulting scans are converted to .PDF, named accordingly, and ready for archiving! I scan about 10-15 pages a day on a regular basis, and sometimes 100-125 at a time to convert older paper documents.

A nice plus that might be considered for the next version, is a straighter path for paper so that I may scan all my old photographs in large batches.

If you are into organizing everything in your life, then seriously consider this.

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