Nikon ls 2000 nikon scan win 7 install#
Update 1: Shane Cook (see comments) provided an easier way to install unsigned drivers. Updated 3: Shane’s suggested method is now blocked by windows Secure Boot Policy… you can turn off the Secure Boot Policy, but the methods I found are more complex than the original method to do this… so I’ve reverted back.
Nikon ls 2000 nikon scan win 7 drivers#
Step 3: Configure Windows 10 to let you install unsigned drivers
![nikon ls-2000 nikon scan win 7 nikon ls-2000 nikon scan win 7](https://lh4.ggpht.com/_AKAirBqiu8U/S_hMW7n80mI/AAAAAAAAAOU/U8MXQOvU0P8/s800/Nikon5000.jpg)
You will need a VHDCI 68M SCSI cable or adapter, they are still being sold by: LexTek (if you know of other sources, please let me know in the comments).
![nikon ls-2000 nikon scan win 7 nikon ls-2000 nikon scan win 7](http://www.scansionidiapositive.it/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/nikon_super_coolscan_ls2000_scansionidiapositive-700x490.jpg)
I’ve personally tested the Windows 10 driver for Adaptec AHA-29xx cards with an AHA 2940U PCI card. Luckily a skilled person on the internet has made 64-bit compatible drivers to support some of Adaptec’s cards under Windows 10 (sorry I’ve found nothing for the latest version of the Macintosh OS). Now 18 years later, SCSI is an obsolete technology, and in general is not supported under the latest versions of Windows and the the Macintosh OS, although I believe Linux still has support. When I first started playing with 68k macintosh systems around 1999/2000 (a Macintosh Plus) I connected an external SCSI drive to my Windows 98 system and was able to use an early version of Basilisk II with SCSI pass-through to format the hard drive.