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#2
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I am curious what is the typical usable area of a flatbed scanner. I can see the scanner bulb extends beyond 8 1/2 inches and the travel of the bulb is longer than 11 inches, yet I have yet to figure out how to scan full 8 1/2 by 11 inch documents, or even larger sizes that fit onto the flatbed. Also, I would like someone to define some of these terms in my manual like, A4, A5, LTR, LTR/L, and LEGAL. They also appear on the sides of my flatbed table, but make no sense when used with Epson's Smart Panel Program. Sherwin D Generally the 1-2mm (less than 0.1") abutting the plastic frame does not |
#3
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On Sat, 13 Jan 2007 02:06:23 -0500, sherwindu <sherwindu (AT) comcast (DOT) net wrote: I am curious what is the typical usable area of a flatbed scanner. I can see the scanner bulb extends beyond 8 1/2 inches and the travel of the bulb is longer than 11 inches, yet I have yet to figure out how to scan full 8 1/2 by 11 inch documents, or even larger sizes that fit onto the flatbed. Sherwin D Generally the 1-2mm (less than 0.1") abutting the plastic frame does not scan, regardless of where the lamp goes. |
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On Sat, 13 Jan 2007 02:06:23 -0500, sherwindu <sherwindu (AT) comcast (DOT) net wrote: I am curious what is the typical usable area of a flatbed scanner. I can see the scanner bulb extends beyond 8 1/2 inches and the travel of the bulb is longer than 11 inches, yet I have yet to figure out how to scan full 8 1/2 by 11 inch documents, or even larger sizes that fit onto the flatbed. Also, I would like someone to define some of these terms in my manual like, A4, A5, LTR, LTR/L, and LEGAL. They also appear on the sides of my flatbed table, but make no sense when used with Epson's Smart Panel Program. Sherwin D Generally the 1-2mm (less than 0.1") abutting the plastic frame does not scan, regardless of where the lamp goes. A4 and LEGAL etc. are important terms to your printer, not so much to the scanner. The rest of the world uses the International Standards Organization [ISO] dimensions for its A/B/C series papers based on the ratio (sqrt1/1) but if you never leave the U.S. you never see them; OfficeDepot doesn't stock any of the paper, altho' they have ring binders for them. LTR is 8.5x11". LEGAL is 8.5x14", fading in popularity 'tho OfficeDepot still stocks. If the scanner bed is less than 12" you cannot get a 100% scan of legal-length paper. You have no options in source or target size until you choose 'Professional' in the MODE field at the top right of the Smart Panel window. In Preview View you move the crop borders, on your printer you change your forms in its software and change the paper in the feed tray. |
#5
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I am curious what is the typical usable area of a flatbed scanner. I can see the scanner bulb extends beyond 8 1/2 inches and the travel of the bulb is longer than 11 inches, yet I have yet to figure out how to scan full 8 1/2 by 11 inch documents, or even larger sizes that fit onto the flatbed. Also, I would like someone to define some of these terms in my manual like, A4, A5, LTR, LTR/L, and LEGAL. They also appear on the sides of my flatbed table, but make no sense when used with Epson's Smart Panel Program. Sherwin D. A4 is a size in the range of the European A-series papers, which run |
#6
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sherwindu wrote: I am curious what is the typical usable area of a flatbed scanner. I can see the scanner bulb extends beyond 8 1/2 inches and the travel of the bulb is longer than 11 inches, yet I have yet to figure out how to scan full 8 1/2 by 11 inch documents, or even larger sizes that fit onto the flatbed. Also, I would like someone to define some of these terms in my manual like, A4, A5, LTR, LTR/L, and LEGAL. They also appear on the sides of my flatbed table, but make no sense when used with Epson's Smart Panel Program. Sherwin D. A4 is a size in the range of the European A-series papers, which run from A0 to A6. The dimensions are in the ratio of 1:sqrt(2) for all sizes, and that ratio allows successive halving of any size to produce two sheets with the same aspect ratio, i.e. cutting with no loss. An A4 halved produces two A5 sheets. A4 is the most commonly used size outside of the USA, at 210 x 297 mm, or 8.25 x 11.7 inches, slightly narrower and longer than the American Letter, which is 8.5 x 11 inches. Most recent scanners will scan an 8.5 x 11.7 area, which covers both A4 and Letter sizes. What scanner are you using? Colin D. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#7
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On Sat, 13 Jan 2007 02:06:23 -0500, sherwindu <sherwindu (AT) comcast (DOT) net wrote: Also, I would like someone to define some of these terms in my manual like, A4, A5, LTR, LTR/L, and LEGAL. They also appear on the sides of my flatbed |
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Hi Colin, I'm using the scanner from an Epson RX500, All-In-One. I have tried everything thinkable and I cannot capture an image larger than say about 8 X 10 inches. Trying to copy standard letters and documents that have information close to the edge of the paper have the outer information cut off. I can see the scanner bed is at least as wide as a LTR size and the scanner light extends beyond the width of the document and travels well beyond its length. I'm using Epson's Smart Panel Software and the Professional Mode direct Epson Scan and none of these options will capture a complete standard letter size. Sherwin D. It looks like you have a problem there, perusing the web didn't reveal |
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Colin_D wrote: sherwindu wrote: I am curious what is the typical usable area of a flatbed scanner. I can see the scanner bulb extends beyond 8 1/2 inches and the travel of the bulb is longer than 11 inches, yet I have yet to figure out how to scan full 8 1/2 by 11 inch documents, or even larger sizes that fit onto the flatbed. Also, I would like someone to define some of these terms in my manual like, A4, A5, LTR, LTR/L, and LEGAL. They also appear on the sides of my flatbed table, but make no sense when used with Epson's Smart Panel Program. Sherwin D. A4 is a size in the range of the European A-series papers, which run from A0 to A6. The dimensions are in the ratio of 1:sqrt(2) for all sizes, and that ratio allows successive halving of any size to produce two sheets with the same aspect ratio, i.e. cutting with no loss. An A4 halved produces two A5 sheets. A4 is the most commonly used size outside of the USA, at 210 x 297 mm, or 8.25 x 11.7 inches, slightly narrower and longer than the American Letter, which is 8.5 x 11 inches. Most recent scanners will scan an 8.5 x 11.7 area, which covers both A4 and Letter sizes. What scanner are you using? Colin D. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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