Get superior image quality and enhanced productivity from the WorkForce GT-1500 color document imaging scanner. This easy-to-use scanner offers the versatility you need to electronically archive important documents or share records with your workgroup. And, with 1200 x 2400 dpi resolution, it delivers truly amazing quality, so you can capture every detail ¿ all with easy, one-touch scanning. This powerful performer makes it easy to scan stacks of records, applications and forms. Use the high-capacity Automatic Document Feeder to quickly scan a variety of sizes up to 8.5×14. The WorkForce GT-1500 speeds through scans up to 20 pages per minute, giving you more time to tackle other tasks. And, it not only offers greater productivity, it ensures more efficient operation. With innovative ReadyScanTM LED technology, there¿s no warmup time required. Best of all, this LED technology does not include any mercury, and it reduces power consumption. The smart choice for all your document imaging needs, the WorkForce GT-1500 includes a powerful software package. ABBYY FineReader Sprint Plus OCR allows you to create editable text from scans, while ScanSoft PaperPort makes it easy to organize all your documents. Use Epson Scan to create multi-page PDFs, or to copy or send scans as e-mail attachments. It¿s all right at your fingertips with the WorkForce GT-1500, a powerful performer available at an amazing value.
Achieve remarkable clarity and detail – 1200 x 2400 dpi resolution
Get more done – scans up to 20 ppm
Quickly scan documents – 40-page Automatic Document Feeder
Organize scanned documents – document management software included
Operating Systems: Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional, XP Home Edition, XP Professional, XP Professional x64, Windows Vista and Mac OS X 10.3 – 10.5.x
8 reviews for Epson WorkForce GT-1500 Document Image Sheet-Fed Scanner with Automatic Document Feeder (ADF) (Discontinued by manfacturer)
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$199.99

Valentine –
Does the job well
with some twenty file drawers of papers, mostly business documents, I went on a quest to reduce the volume by archiving those documents where permanent paper copies are not needed. A document scanner looked to be my best option. The GT-1500 fits the bill. I loaded the software in my MacBook Pro which took quite a bit longer than I expected. At times I thought the installation failed, however by being patient and not aborting the installation, I was rewarded by a complete install. Then it is simply a matter of connecting the cables and turning on the scanner. (BTW the directions say not to connect the USB cable which is incorrect. You need to connect the USB cable.) The document feeder operates at about 20 ppm (in the 300 dpi and B&W mode), which is great. With this setting it takes about 1 meg of memory per 20 pages. You can also select grey scale and color settings, however with those settings the scans take longer. The alignment is not always sharp so some pdf scans can be a bit off, you just have to be careful in loading the pages. If the pages have dog eared top edges due to staples being removed, you can reverse the feeding and go bottom first. Then after scanning of the document is finished, click on the edit icon and flip the pages before saving the document. For lengthy documents, after the first batch is run through the scanner, click on the add pages icon and continue batch after batch until the entire document is complete. You can also change settings for individual pages in a document, for example if one of the pages has a color image, you can select color for that page. It just has to be a separate scan rather than in the middle of a stack of pages. The completed scanned document can go wherever you chose in your computer. The default on the Mac is the document folder.I also like the relatively small foot print and light weight of the scanner which make for portability.My only concern is how well the document feeder with hold up long term. So far I have no problem after feeding about 1500 pages, however the feeding mechanism has plastic parts which has me a bit nervous.
happycrazymommy –
Easy to use, quality scans
It was difficult for me to spend $200 on a machine that only scanned but I finally took the plunge. This scanner is a replacement for a HP 5180 all-in-one machine, which I was only using for scanning, it did print beautifully but cost too much in ink to be a high use printer like I need. I have an Epson Workforce 1100 with a bulk ink system for cheap printing. To say this is a scanner is a huge improvement is an understatement! I scan 100+ pages per week of homeschooling materials for my kids. This was a tedious and time consuming chore on the old machine but is almost fun on this one. Okay so scanning may not be fun, but being able to get the job done without any communication errors and literally in less than half the time (this baby scans fast) is great.I use the ADF for 75% of my scanning and the flatbed for the rest. Both methods yield the same excellent quality. There are many scanning options which are simple and quick to change as needed. When scanning numerous pages into one file (45 is the most I have saved as a single full-color file) the save process after the scanning is complete is a bit time consuming but I just let it do its thing in the background, it doesn’t slow my computer down at all.There is a print feature on the scanner that will print the scan to the printer of your choice rather than having to save the file first. This is the only feature I have found that doesn’t work like I had hoped, which is why I took 1 star away. When using this feature the scan takes a very, very long time in comparison to regular scanning. I thought I may have some settings wrong, but so far I haven’t been able to speed it up which is bummer because lots of my scans don’t need to be saved just printed. If I am able to remedy this problem I will change my review to 5 stars.
Plato Walks Into a bar… –
A Moderately Priced Solution for Book Scanning
After many false starts with several scanners the Epson GT-1500 has earned a permanent place in this book scanner’s office (until the prices on commercial units come down). Most of the reviews for the Epson GT-1500 are, quite reasonably, predicated on the idea that most customers will use the product in a small or home office environment. This review is from the perspective of one who wishes to use the GT-1500 as a book scanner or archival tool.Pros:- The GT-1500 is extremely fast. Much faster than any of the Canon or Brother scanners that I tried and faster even than Epson’s own multipurpose scanner/printer/fax machines.- Document handing on the ADF (Automatic Document Feeder) is remarkably reliable. From glossy magazine papers to heavily milled 32lb papers to newsprint-quality paperback paper the ADF seldom jammed and never grabbed two sheets of paper.- Resolution is great for OCR (Optical Character Recognition.Cons:- Epson Scan software is clunky and far from convenient. More on this later…- For a Mac user, the scan to PDF function does not allow for an editable text layer behind an optical scan. In fact, it does not even seen to allow for editable text at all.- No duplex functionality and worse yet, very limited naming option makes recreating double-sided documents (like the pages in a book) a real pain.- Included Abby FineReader Software is a joke unless you plan to scan only a few documents or are willing to take whatever the scanner spits out with its auto “scan to PDF functionality.”On the pros, the scanner is remarkably well built and seems to handle automatic document feeding well with a minimum of hassles. While the scanner is able to scan at a native 1200 ppi its ability to perform OCR and automatic deskew is capped at only 600 ppi. Functionally then, the scanner is only useful for document archival up to 600 ppi unless one wishes to run through each page with Photoshop and manually correct the image before sending it through a second round of OCR conversion. However, 600 ppi is sufficient for OCR with all but the most demanding (Hebrew or Sanskrit) documents so this is not a huge issue. Also, this is not a fault of the scanner itself but Epson’s included software. This note will be struck again and again: the scanner is great but the included software hobbles it.On the cons, book scanning means being able to handle a high volume of pages in an orderly and efficient manner that does not suck your life away. My first couple days with the GT-1500 were mind numbing, soul stealing excercises in document renaming and workflow headaches. This was due, largely, to two oversights on the part of Epson’s software: 1) the scan naming functionality is weak. Documents may be named with a re-occuring string of alphanumeric character plus a strip of ascending numbers beginning with 001 and topping out at 999. While this is fine for single sided documents, it makes for frustrating dual sided scans. The workable solution is to scan a book’s first 40 odd pages that will be labeled something like “Book 001” and so one and then rename them all so that they read “Book 001b, Book 002b, etc.” Then scan all the even pages with the normal “Book 001, Book 002, etc. so that they fall into the correct order. This batch renaming can be accomplished in Photoshop for PC users or in Mac’s Automator program that resides in OSX. Would it have killed Epson to include the ability to name files with multiple fields, descending numbering, or just the ability to designate a batch of pages as “odd” and the other “even?”This brings us to the joys of Epson’s included Abbey FineReader software. First, unlike the IRIS software included with Canon’s scanners, the the FineReader software is largely a stand-alone product. The exception is in the automatic “scan to PDF” functionality. However, as a stand alone product it reveals itself to be a cheesy sut rate version of Abbey’s otherwise outstanding OCR products. First off, the software does NOT for the creation of editable text. Thus, whatever the OCR reads on the page is what will be included in your PDF or stripped out as a text document mistakes and all. For PC users, one can opt to buy the full software for an additional $500 and actually get something that does the job. For Mac users, the only option is to pay an additional $100 and get the “Express” version which does at least allow for batch processing of file folders (something that Epson’s included version of the Abbey software does not). This is nearly unforgivable in my opinion. If one wants images that are straight beyond the narrow abilities of Epson’s automatic deskew they must manually correct the skew in a program like Photoshop and then sit and manually open each individual file and save it as a converted OCR’ed PDF while manually typing in the name of the new document. NO, Abbey’s software can’t even be bothered to default to the name of the original file. Instead ever file is called “TEXT” until you manually enter in its proper name. So, for a person scanning books the included software is a joke unless you are willing accept wonky text angles and mistakes in your searchable PDF files. The only complete solution is to buy Abbey’s full version of the FineReader OCR software that includes the ability to batch process and edit the resulting text before resaving the whole document as a converted PDF file. The work-around solution for MAC users is to pay an additional chunk of change for the “Express” version to get batch processing and just deal with the mistakes that the OCR software throws-up periodically.That brings us to the most easily fixed broken-link in Epson’s “Epson Scan” software: there is no manual de-skew. The auto de-skew is barely functional in general–far less so than Canon’s script to do the same– and without manual control some pages are bound to wind up a bit wonky. Fortunately, Epson’s ADF is quite competent at pulling the pages in relatively straight as long as the feed arms are kept tight to the edges of the stack. However, generally first and last pages tend to get pulled a few degrees (or thirty) off of straight.For those who are unwilling to pony up thousands for camera based book-scanning solutions or unable to build DIY projects that do the same, the Epson GT-1500 can turn an average book into an archival string of bits in about four hours start to finish. This is fast enough to equal cheap college text books (borrowed from friends or libraries and digitized) and easy enough to allow for a person to convert often used reference books into searchable digital PDFs. However, for those with deeper pockets there are better camera based options available. So while the Epson’s scanning software greatly limits the scanner’s native abilities there are no other options available in the sub $500 range that turn a book into a file as easily. The duplexing abilities of Fuji’s Scansnap series of scanners would be a great step up for those willing to pay $500 (and sacrifice a document table) or so but the reality is that most people are still going to pay an additional fee to buy scanning software capable of producing editable text.The final words on Epson’s GT-1500 is “good enough” and worthy of five stars only in that it does the job that very few others do–even while it does it poorly.
عايض –
المنتج ممتاز وسعر جيد
Carole Gendron –
Numeriseur pour documents 81/2 X14 rapide prend plusieurs feuilles
Aashish Siingh –
Good
SABRINA GHIZZI –
Produto excelente. Ótima qualidade, tanto o scanner do vidro quanto a parte da bandeira digitalizam muito bem e são rápidos. Produto chegou muito rápido também, antes da previsão.
Roleg500 –
Je n’ai jamais eu un scanner aussi efficace. Bravo!