

📸 Preserve the past at lightning speed—because your memories deserve the best!
The ClearClick QuickConvert 2.0 is a versatile photo, slide, and negative scanner that digitizes 4x6 photos and various film formats at up to 22 megapixels interpolated resolution. It features a fast 2-3 second scan time, a built-in rechargeable battery for cordless use, and a 5-inch preview LCD screen. No computer or drivers are required, making it effortless to convert physical memories into high-quality digital JPEGs saved directly to an SD card. Ideal for professionals and enthusiasts looking to preserve and share family history with ease.



| ASIN | B073V879J5 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #48,514 in Office Products ( See Top 100 in Office Products ) #30 in Slide & Negative Scanners |
| Brand | ClearClick |
| Color Depth | 24 bpp |
| Connection Type | USB |
| Connectivity Technology | USB |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 511 Reviews |
| Item Dimensions D x W x H | 8"D x 7"W x 6"H |
| Item Height | 6 inches |
| Item Weight | 38 Ounces |
| Manufacturer | ClearClick |
| Media Type | 35mm Slides, 35mm, 110, 126 Negatives, 4x6 Photos or Smaller, Photos, Slides, & Negatives |
| Minimum System Requirements | Windows 7 |
| Model Name | QuickConvert 2.0 |
| Optical Sensor Technology | CIS |
| Paper Size | 8.3 x 11.7 Inches |
| Product Dimensions | 8"D x 7"W x 6"H |
| Resolution | 7200 |
| Scanner Type | Film, Photo |
| Standard Sheet Capacity | 10 |
| UPC | 798578762856 |
S**H
Highly Recommend This Item!!
Easy to use! Quality scans! It's well worth the price to be able to scan all my negatives, and those of my other family members, thus saving them all for historical preservation AND now so easy to share among the rest of the family! Couple of tips: Make sure you select the right size negative when starting up the machine and also double check the negative vs photo scanner slide switch in the front - sometimes it will move as you're sliding negatives in and out and will cause a distortion in the negative you're trying to scan. No big deal, just something to be aware of!
M**L
Robust slide & photo scanner
This ClearClick image scanner was purchased (initially) for the creation of the ultimate Christmas gift. Family members *truly* enjoy having their decades-old slides & photos available in electronic format. It is relatively labor intensive to work through any project of this type, but where there is a will, there is a way. No doubt, the ClearClick streamlined the entire process and produced amazing results. Where professional digitizing services charge (on average) ~$1/slide or photo, this unit will far exceed its price tag value when you have hundreds to thousands of photographic memories. If you can allocate the time doing the work, yourself, then just do it. Couple of notes: - if scanning slides, use canned-air to remove dust particles prior to each scan. It's well worth the effort, you don't want to have to redo anything. I went through 2 cans, cleaning ~900 slides. I eventually picked up an electric handheld, dust-blower/remover since canned-air can be pricey. At present, I still have a over a few thousand slides yet to scan. - If scanning boxes of slides, carousels of slides, or envelopes of photos: -- Just a suggestion: do one entire box/envelope/slide-carousel at a time. I moved them after each completed batch to a computer. -- I named them using the slide/photo film development date and slide/photo number (when available), using a naming scheme of '<year>_<month>__<slide#/photo#>.jpg, so '1971_08__15.jpg' as an example. Where there was more than one box with same developing dates, I suffixed the month with a letter, ex: '1971_08b__15.jpg' which was slide 15 from the second box. Moving the image files off from the scanner card (using USB mode on the ClearClick) and renaming the jpeg files right away eliminated any potential for confusion of what had already been scanned. - Scanning one slide/photo does take ~1-2 seconds, as indicated. - Scanning photos while they're still in the plastic of an album 'works' but the rows of scanner LEDs could sometimes be seen on the top and bottom of the finished scan. Removing them from the plastic, while it adds more time, is well-worth the effort. You only want to "have to" scan your photos one time, in my opinion. - The ClearClick on-screen menu took a little bit to get used to, but it's relatively intuitive. I only used the brightness and RGB color adjustments a small handful of times. Keep in mind that each of those color adjustment settings remains 'set' until the unit's power is cycled or if you go back in to reset them. - I haven't tried the HDMI 'preview via a TV' feature, but that is certainly a bonus. The screen on the unit worked for my needs. - The included 32GB SD card was more than enough. Image files were, on average, 3-4MB in size using the 22MP setting. The ~900 jpeg files were ~3GB, in total.
U**R
Easy set up
So far it’s working well. It was easy to set up with clear instructions. The only thing is picking up the unit and setting it down before and after each scan is an inconvenience. That’s the reason for the 4 stars. I’ve only scanned 45 photos so I haven’t uploaded any from the SD card to my computer yet.
S**N
Nice tool for scanning old photos.
Great size which makes it easy to use. I bought it to scan old photos stuck in photo albums and it worked very well. The scanned photos looked good - color was accurate and the photos looked like the ones in the album. And it was very fast.
V**R
Great slide converter - Highly recommend
Found hundreds of slides for the 1970’s and decided to convert to digital. BlearClick quick Convert 2.0 scanner my choice due to price and information available. I had no issues setting up or converting all these old slides. It comes with a scan disc which made transfer of digital copies of slides easy to sort and get into my computer system. Very glad to have had this scanner for my family’s slides. By the way the many of the slides converted to very good quality pictures even being 50 years old. Highly recommend.
P**X
The scanner works great and the software is a nice addition
The scanner works as expected and is easy to use. • It's really helpful to be able to scan from above the photo without using the base. There have been times I've needed to scan a photo "in place" in a photo album. • The multiple options for the size of the photos (e.g. 3.5x5, 4x6) are adequate, although it would be nice to be able to scan 5x7 photos. When scanning 4x6 photos, there is a little bit cut off all around the photo, so I'm careful to position the photo prior to scanning. • I've used it for scanning both slides and photos and am pleased with the results. I'm using it to scan old photos that are of varying quality, so I'm not expecting extremely high quality results from the scanner. • For slides, it works with the standard 35mm slide that is 24mm x 36mm. Note that it can't scan 35mm slides that are 40mm x 40mm square film size. • Others have noted that the scanner doesn't work well with curled photos. I put a stiff clear plastic page over the curled photo, then scan from above, and that solves the problem. The weight of the scanner over the plastic page flattens the curling. A big plus is the PhotoPad Professional software included with the product. When I purchased the scanner, I didn't realize how valuable this addition would be. Since some of the photos I'm scanning are poor quality, the software can help improve the digital version of the photo. I don't have Adobe PhotoShop and am not a professional "retoucher," but I find the software useful for light editing, including color correction and adding text.
A**R
Sounds like a great gadget, until you see the results.
Clear Click does have some decent gadgets, I’m about to try their VHS converter, and I’m hoping to get better results from that, than their photo box. I attempted to get more specs on the type of lens/sensor equipped with this device, all I could find was it captured 180dpi. This doesn’t really say a lot, but I wanted to give it a shot. Upon receiving the equipment, I was startled to see how light and fragile the plastic box was. And that’s pretty much all this is, a black hollow box with a very tiny WebCam at the top. I have thousands of old photos I need digitized, and setting each photo in the tray, and running the system takes a little longer then I had hoped. The results are underwhelming, and finally I discovered the dimensions, about 3800 x 2400, 180DPI. I stated with a black and white old photo, and the clarity is very muddy, details are missing. For nearly $200 this really isn’t worth it. I needed up going with the Epson FF680w. Yes it’s $600, but I can scan 30-40 photos at one time, in under a minute, at 1200DPI, and have then colored corrected instantly.
M**H
OK but could be improved. FYI it crops negatives
I hate that it crops the negatives, which is especially bad for wedding photos - cuts off the dress, people's arms, in some cases you lose an entire person from your photo. Also, it's not at all easy/quick bc you have to pick up the scanner and place the photo underneath one at a time. Would be so much better if photos slid in the scanner like the negatives. The negatives also take a while to scan bc I have to try to adjust them one by one so that the scanner isn't cropping off key parts of a photo. Adds a significant amount of time to the process. The controls are OK, just take a little getting used to. It doesn't do anything fancy so I'm hoping a good photo editor can finish the job after all is scanned. I'm not having issues with the lights reflecting on the photos so far. That may be worse if you're scanning glossy photos. For the price, and since this was the only scanner I found for negatives and photos, I guess it's a decent purchase.