dying scanner?

Joe,

Short answer is yes. But check your scanner documentation. Is there a diagnostic you can run? It might be able to run a "synch" correction.

BTW, what kind of scanner is it? Flatbed or film? If former, what does it do with paper docs?
 
Doesn't look good. However, the demise of my Nikon scanner was much quicker ... it scanned one frame, made grinding noises and never scanned anything again.
A recalibration might be the fix ... we'll hope.

Peter
 
back alley said:
but what happened, do you think?

i have used those same settings almost since i got the scanner.

though, i think i like these setting better, so far.

another look...

do not ask such imponderables, joe.

these dagnab gadgets have a mind of their own.

i know this - i'm scanning right now.

i'm convinced that they use japanese "fuzzy logic" programming which does not get along well with wintel protocols.

in other words, don't worry, be happy until the next time! 😕
 
back alley said:
i have used those same settings almost since i got the scanner.
All it takes is a single bit in the preference file to get munged and the scanner's brain gets scrambled. Making a change, doing a calibration cycle or a reset (whatever fits) forces it to rewrite the information ... hopefully resetting the preference to something that makes sense.

Peter
 
Okay, that's it!

I've felt like my darned 50's have been welded to my R2S and S2 ever since this blastedly long contest started.

Off come the normals!

Joe, you da' man.

Time to toss off "normalcy" and get back to "perspective"!! 😱

I'll send my "losers" into the contest just so I can take the darn 50 off the gear!
 
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