
Kodak
The Kodak Slide N Scan Max (RODFS70) is a standalone 7-inch LCD film scanner that digitizes 35mm, 110, and 126 negatives and slides directly to an SD card. It offers one-touch scanning, continuous feed, and USB/HDMI connectivity, targeting casual users who want an easy, portable solution.
Pros
Current
$209.99
Average
$197.55
Lowest
$159.99
Highest
$209.99
Lower = better sales rank
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Cons
From Expert Reviews
Praised by Experts
Criticized by Experts
From User Reviews
Users Love
Users Complain About
Best For
Family historians, seniors, and casual users who want a simple, portable way to digitize 35mm, 110, and 126 slides/negatives without a computer; moderate‑volume projects, educational or nostalgic display, and on‑the‑go scanning with a power bank.
Not Ideal For
Professional archivists, photographers needing high‑resolution or color‑accurate scans, users with medium‑format (120/220) film, and anyone requiring built‑in dust/scratch removal or batch color correction.
Expert Opinion
Professional reviewers describe the RODFS70 as a convenient, user‑friendly tool for casual digitization, praising its built‑in screen and continuous‑feed system but warning that the 14MP sensor and lack of advanced editing features make it unsuitable for archival or large‑print work. They recommend higher‑end scanners for serious photographers.
What Users Say
Everyday users appreciate the scanner’s simplicity, price, and the ability to preview scans on the large LCD, often using it as a digital photo frame. Common frustrations revolve around the inability to handle 110 slides reliably, the need for an SD card, lack of dust‑removal software, and occasional hardware failures after moderate use.
Common Complaints
Incompatibility with 110 slides in plastic mounts, vertical lines appearing after several hundred scans, requirement of an SD card that isn’t supplied, absence of HDMI cable, and lack of medium‑format support.
What People Are Saying
“Easy to use—my 94-year-old parents love it.”
“Great for the price—scans are clear and colors are accurate for old negatives.”
“110 slides in plastic frames don’t fit—Kodak says it supports them, but it doesn’t work.”
“After 500 scans, vertical lines appeared on screen and saved images—now unusable.”
How It Compares
vs. Kodak Scanza (RODFS35)
Advantages
Disadvantages
Choose Scanza if you need Super 8/8mm support; otherwise RODFS70 offers a larger screen and continuous feed.
vs. Plustek OpticFilm 8100
Advantages
Disadvantages
Select OpticFilm 8100 for archival quality and high‑resolution needs; RODFS70 is better for on‑the‑go, screen‑based scanning.
vs. Pacific Image PrimeFilm XA
Advantages
Disadvantages
PrimeFilm XA is suited for users demanding higher resolution and ICE technology, while RODFS70 serves casual users who value portability and a built‑in display.