Austin wrote: > Because the scanning software gives different results > (appears to "cure" the problem), that doesn't mean it's > not hardware. The jaggies problem is a design fault in the scanner hardware which fortunately can be resolved in software. I didn't say that the hardware wasn't ultimately at fault, but anything which can be solved in software is a lot better than something which requires a recall for hardware modification. > I do believe for the 8000, Ed said it was probably a > hardware/firmware problem. I've asked him if he had > any more information on this, and am awaiting his answer. Yup, from what Ed has said it's related to the use of the three rows of CCD elements. It sounds like the three row idea was something which didn't quite work in practice. Again it's a hardware fault which it appears can be resolved in software - but of course it means the hardware isn't behaving as it was originally designed to. Much the same as the jaggies problem being related to the use of a command to reading 64K of data at a time and how the hardware behaved when that command was used. Rob Rob Geraghty [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://wordweb.com