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Digital Camera World
Digital Camera World
Gareth Bevan

Plustek OpticFilm 135i film scanner review: hardware heaven, software hell

Plustek OpticFilm 135i on a wooden surface.

Film photography continues its comeback, with a whole new generation of photographers enamored with the tones and textures that you can only get with film. No matter how much those Lightroom presets claim otherwise, there is something special about film that can’t be recreated.

Plustek's scanners for different types of film have been hugely popular in the film photography community, and Plustek contributed several scanners to our guide to the best film scanners. Plustek’s OpticFilm 8200i SE is my favorite 35mm scanner – and the OpticFilm 8100 is one of the most affordable ways to get high-quality scans of your negatives.

There are other options for film scanning, including camera scanning – which can be very fiddly, and actually very expensive if you don’t already own all the gear, and flatbed scanning – which is great for bulk scanning, but flatbed scanners are big and heavy to keep around your desk. 

Plustek’s scanners fit somewhere in the middle, a dedicated scanner for one frame at a time that requires some amount of effort to nail perfectly, but is also simple enough that almost anyone can get decent scans with a little know-how. 

The Plustek OpticFilm 135i takes the Plustek formula that has been so successful with models like the OpticFilm 8200i SE and adds in a motor to automatically move frames from the scanner, saving photographers everywhere the tedious task of manually pushing each frame through. The 135i also keeps hallmarks like a high-quality 7200 max DPI and an infrared channel for identifying dust and scratches that can automatically removed. 

However, the OpticFilm 135i is the only scanner in Plustek's current popular range that doesn’t come bundled with SilverFast scanning software, instead opting for Plustek’s own QuickScan Plus. Which as you’ll discover as you read on, is the scanner's eventual undoing. 

I think the Plustek OpticFilm 135i is a nice looking bit of kit. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)

Plustek OpticFilm 135i: Specifications

Plustek OpticFilm 135i: Price & Availability

The RRP of the Plustek OpticFilm 135i is $429 / £429, although can be found for cheaper a lot of the time (at time of writing it has $30 off at Amazon). This places it as around a $50-70 premium option over the entry-level Plustek OpticFilm 8100, although offers a few extra key features, with automated scanning and an infrared channel, however, the Plustek 8100 does come with superior SilverFast 9 SE Plus scanning software bundled in though. 

Where the decision becomes tricky is the 135i is around the same price as the outstanding Plustek OpticFilm 8200i SE, which features a much better software experience with a SilverFast 9 SE Plus license included in the box, but lacks the OpticFilm 135i’s automated scanning. 

Depending on your scanning needs you might find out need to purchase additional software for the OpticFilm 135i to get the same experience – but more on that later in the review.

Unfortunately this gif cannot convey the high-pitched whine of the motor. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)

Plustek OpticFilm 135i: Design & Handling

In my opinion, the Plustek OpticFilm 135i is the best-looking of all Plustek’s 35mm scanning solutions. Trading in the cheaper-looking molded plastic chassis of the 8200 series for a faux leather finish that looks much more classy to be sitting on your desk. The sides also have a ridged design to them giving them the illusion of being vents and making the 135i scanner look like a serious bit of kit.

Along the top are LED-backed buttons for quick control of the scanner. I personally don’t find these that useful as I prefer to control everything from within the software on my computer for ultimate accuracy in what I am doing, but for those that prioritize speed then this is a faster way to get scanning. There is also an on/off standby button (there is a mains kill-switch power button on the rear of the device), and the only button you will have to use – is the eject button. Putting the film holder into the machine activates the motor that then locks the holder in the first position, the only way to remove the holder is by safely ejecting it which protects the precise motor controls from being yanked out of place.

The buttons on top work for quick scanning, as well as powering on/off and ejecting the film holder tray. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)
You have to manually eject the film tray when finished as it locks into the mechanism. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)

The film holders also go through the machine front to back instead of through the sides, which to me, just makes so much more sense, and I found they get in the way far less when I am working. You do have to leave the scanner with some clearance room at the back, but not much more than you need for the wiring, and to get a hand in to flick the on-off switch.  As the holder goes through the machine, the motor sound is loud enough that I can still hear it over the music coming from my laptop, so I had to get out my noise-canceling headphones as the pitch was quite irritating after a few rounds through the scanner.

The film holder is larger than those included in the 8200 series but is much higher quality. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)
The holder holds the films very flat and even for scanning. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)

The holders themselves are outstanding, I have heaped so much praise on Plustek’s holders for the 8200i SE as they hold film so incredibly flat, but the 135i’s holders raise the bar even further. The holder is much heavier and more solid feeling as it adds tracks around the sides for the automated scanning, but the clip for the film strip is much more pleasurable to open and load, with a smooth action, and magnets that hold it in place instead of the slightly flimsy feeling clips from the 8200i. 

The 135i has a much smaller footprint than a flatbed scanner, and weighs almost nothing, so is easy to move around. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)

The OpticFilm 135i comes with two holders, one for 35mm frames, and one for mounted slides – I would still love Plustek to sell a holder for getting the spokes of my film in shot, as that would be an instant purchase from me, but alas no, although you can buy a panoramic film holder from Plustek directly.

The 135i connects to a computer with a USB-A to printer lead, now I am not sure how frequently the 135i is being manufactured and packaged, but in 2024, it would be nice to get a USB-C lead or at least a USB-A to USB-C adapter dropped in the box. I have been using the USB-C adapter that came with my Google Pixel phone, which has done the job, although most USB hubs will also be fine. If you don’t have either of these, then you will need to add one to your basket, tacking on a little more initial cost. 

The USB-A cable needs to be adapted to most modern laptops with only USB-C ports. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)

Plustek OpticFilm 135i: Performance

Oh how perfect the OpticFilm 135i could have been. If this scanner was bundled with SilverFast then it would have been joining the 8200i SE in getting another five-star review from me. But no, Plustek decided that its own OpticFilm QuickScan Plus would be good enough – that was misjudged.

Strangely, on 'custom' scanning, 3600 dpi is the 'best' with 7200 dpi nowhere to be found. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)
Scanning takes around 5 minutes on 3600 dpi with a few extra minutes for processing. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)
The software automatically crops out each frame into individual images. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)
Images can be viewed, saved, or exported to social sites easily. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)
There are a few buttons to make automatic adjustments, but there is no fine grained control over any of these settings. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)
There are also a number of presets to choose from for quick "styles". (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)

The software might look dated, although I will give it a free pass on that account as most scanning software has a trend of looking like it hasn’t been updated since the turn of the millennium, and QuickScan Plus is actually not the worst offender. The software is very straightforward to use, although this mostly stems from the fact that QuickScan Plus gives you precious few options to choose from, but it guides you through the scanning process with ease, and takes care of almost all the steps for you, with just a few clicks to continue here and there. 

Curiously, when I first loaded the software, the top resolution I could scan using QuickScan Plus was 3600 dpi, with the 7200 dpi option just not listed, which left me perplexed the first few times I tried to use the scanner. Eventually, hitting ‘restore settings’ brought back the 7200 dpi option – although it is still missing from the ‘custom’ scan mode for some reason. QuickScan Plus will let you scan in 48-bit color Tiff files or standard JPEGs, but there is no option from Raw DNG, but you can scan in DNG with other software if that is essential to your workflow.

The scanning process with QuickScan Plus is relatively quick, with a strip of six images scanned at 3600 dpi taking around 5 minutes, with another couple of minutes added on for processing the images afterward. The software then gives some options to edit the photos a little using presets, or a few one-click adjustments for exposure or white balance, these aren’t as fine-tuned as you’d expect in any other photo editing app, but I did manage to salvage some poorly processed scans.

The overall scan quality however is where it all falls apart – as the images produced by the QuickScan Plus are just not good enough. Some of the scans were so bad that I assumed I must have done something terribly wrong – I checked the settings, I checked the film, and I even rescanned the film with another scanner just to make sure, but unfortunately QuickScan Plus is just borderline impractical for any serious scanning quality. 

The below examples compare the output from the Plustek OpticFilm 135i using QuickScan Plus (in the image on the left), and the same image from the Plustek OpticFilm 135i, but instead using VueScan to scan and process the image (image on the right).

Frame scanned using the OpticFilm 135i and QuickScan Plus (Image credit: Gareth Bevan)
The same frame scanned using the OpticFilm 135i but with VueScan (Image credit: Gareth Bevan)
Frame scanned using the OpticFilm 135i and QuickScan Plus (Image credit: Gareth Bevan)
The same frame scanned using the OpticFilm 135i but with VueScan (Image credit: Gareth Bevan)

Most images were at least comprehensible but with an impenetrable layer of digital noise, but some scans just came out as blotchy garbled mess. You can see in the images below the overall quality is poor, and in the final image, I honestly don’t know what happened.

Frame scanned using the OpticFilm 135i and QuickScan Plus (Image credit: Gareth Bevan)
The same frame scanned using the OpticFilm 135i but with VueScan (Image credit: Gareth Bevan)
Frame scanned using the OpticFilm 135i and QuickScan Plus (Image credit: Gareth Bevan)
The same frame scanned using the OpticFilm 135i but with VueScan (Image credit: Gareth Bevan)

I quickly ditched QuickScan Plus and moved to testing the scanner using my usual go-to software VueScan – and suddenly the OpticFilm 135i became a whole different scanner. The fantastic image quality I had come to expect from Plustek after years of using an 8200i SE was back, proving that the hardware was just fine all along, and the software is the Achilles heel.

VueScan can use all the features of the OpticFilm 135i including the top quality of 7200 dpi, infrared scanning, as well as automatic batch scanning. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)

Using VueScan, the OpticFilm 135i could easily now be the scanner to replace my 8200i SE – I don’t know how I lived without the automated scanning! While the actual scanning itself isn’t faster, the time in between to manually push each frame through and click to scan (as well as all the time I don’t notice that I need to move on to the next frame) is gone, which speeds up my entire workflow dramatically. 

Below are more sample images that were scanned using the Plustek OpticFilm 135i but VueScan v9.8 to scan to JPEG.

Harman Phoenix 200 scanned with the Plustek OpticFilm 135i using VueScan 9. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan)
Ilford XP2 Super scanned with the Plustek OpticFilm 135i using VueScan 9. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan)
Harman Phoenix 200 scanned with the Plustek OpticFilm 135i using VueScan 9. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan)

However, at just shy of $100 for a copy of VueScan or SilverFast SE 9 Plus – the almost necessity of adding additional software to your purchase for high-quality scanning makes the 135i so hard to recommend, but yet, I am going to anyway, as the improvements the automatic scanning brings to my workflow are too good to ignore. 

Ilford HP5 Plus scanned with the Plustek OpticFilm 135i using VueScan 9. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan)
Ilford HP5 Plus scanned with the Plustek OpticFilm 135i using VueScan 9. (Image credit: Gareth Bevan)

Plustek OpticFilm 135i: Verdict

It is hard to come to a conclusion on the Plustek OpticFilm 135i as on one hand, the scanner has the incredible hardware that I have come to expect from the 8200i SE, but now with an even more streamlined process as it automatically progresses frames as it scans. On the other hand, the QuickScan Plus software that comes with the scanner is not good enough for anyone serious about getting quality scans from their images. I find it confusing that this seems to be the only Plustek scanner not bundled with SilverFast software.

If you are looking to scan as many negatives as possible just to preserve them for posterity alone, then perhaps the OpticFilm 135i will do that for you with enough ease that some persistent issues with quality can be ignored. But if you actively care about the quality of your 35mm scans then you should either look to the company's 8200 series of scanners or be prepared to invest in additional software to get the most out of what otherwise should be five-star hardware. 

(Image credit: Gareth Bevan / Digital Camera World)

Should you buy the Plustek OpticFilm 135i?

✅ Buy this if...

  • You want to scan lots of negatives fast
  • You want a straightforward and easy-to-use scanner
  • You already own a copy of SilverFast or VueScan

🚫 Don't buy this if...

  • You don’t want to buy additional software
  • You want the best quality scans out of the box
  • You want to scan formats other than 35mm or mounted slides

Plustek OpticFilm 135i Alternatives

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