e...@tiscali.be wrote: > That's quite impossible, unless there is a serious bug in the driver. > This type of scanner is pretty dumb and it doesn't move unless the driver > tells it to move (and the driver never tells it to track back).
Hummm... so you mean, the stepping motor is directly controlled by the driver? Like bytewise? Wow... > Does it happen at all resolutions? I tried with color and BW prescan, and with color, BW & greyscale scan in 50 and 200dpi... all the same. Sometimes it clanks more frequently, sometimes less, but I wouldn't say that this is by any means connected to the resolution or color depth. > This sounds like a physical problem. The fact that you get similar sounds > with the Windows driver seems to confirm this. Ah, I wasn't precise on this one, forgive me. The scanner ran just fine on Win98 and Win2k... trouble started with WinXP (don't laugh ;-). > Those vertically stretched regions may be due to the scanner head jamming > a bit every now and then and jumping ahead when the driving belt tension > increases. Maybe the glider bars need some grease? Yeah, I thought that too... but there's two facts against such a thing, as far as I can see: 1. The noise is *really* loud and *really* precise (hope you know what I mean, it's hard to describe a sound in ASCII). It's not like the sled jamming on the slider bars and breaking loose now & then... more like hitting the case with a No. 8 drum stick. Hard. Precise. Loud. 2. When the head slows down (after 2 or 3 consecutive *clank*), it apparently doesn't do that due to friction but bcs of the stepper motor slowing it down (same frequency but smaller spacing). The actual *clank* noise is not at all correlated with the head's movement. I will try and show you an example in ASCII (s=step, *=noise): head moves this way ----> * * * * * * * * * * s s s s s s s s s s ssssss s s s s sss s s s s s s s s s s sssss.... (sorry it's not actual scale, there are of course many more s between the *... typical distance between consecutive * is about 1 sec.) > If your PC were too slow (or too fast, which would be more likely), you > would probably see other artifacts due to synchronization problems (lines > having the wrong colors or containing garbage). OK. I don't have those symptoms. *phew* Would you encourage me to open that scanner up and have a look? I'm quite comfortable with electronics... but mechanics?... ummm... still remember the last time I dismantled a VCR chassis :-/ Any special tips I should obey? cheers, -wolfgang