From: kimiraikkonen on 20 Jul 2007 08:33 Hi, I have a multifunctional Canon Pixma MP830 all-in-one device and has worked for a long time with no problem. But nowadays, i'm receiving error "cannot communicate with scanner" which is very common error about Canon's Twain driver. I have no problem acquiring to the TWAIN, however i can see the twain interface but the problem comes out while scanning process is about at half, it fails scanner's lid stucks and freezes saying error "cannot communicate with scanner". The biggest and strangest clue is that MP Navigator (Canon's standart scanning soft) fails during scanning, but another applications like MS Imaging and Scanning Wizard or ACDSee can scan "fine" using "canon's Twain SCANGEAR MP". As i said, i've installed TWAIN and software with obeying instructions very carefully and i didn't do any wrong failure during scanning or installing. I've tried these with no luck: 1-Removed then re-installed all the Twain drivers 2-Re-installed MP Navigator 3-Tried using lower DPI, even in 100 dpi i got error, if i use 300dpi on another softwares usually it works. 4-I set services automatic which were set to manual and started. 5-I tried different USB ports. I have no idea and the biggest change on my XP SP2 was installing .NET Framework 2.0. Note: I also have a Canon digital Camera using on the same computer, on the same USB port. However changing different ports did NOT help. Finally, i'd been using this scanner really fine till now. I cannot blame hardware because other apps works OK lower then 300dpi or with 300dpi. Please take care and share your experiences. Also, i couldn't find a direct feedback mail form towards Canon, however plenty of users claim tech support of Canon is not good. Regards.
From: kimiraikkonen on 21 Jul 2007 04:45 However, changed the USB cable all is fine now but the question is: I was used to have 150cm standard USB cable which is recommended, but after replacing it with 120cm cable problem went away? What are the recommended cable length and brand-made types?
From: Barry Watzman on 21 Jul 2007 21:20 The issue isn't so much length as quality. I have had cases where a given cable just would not work with a given device. The replacement cable worked fine ... even if it was longer. kimiraikkonen wrote: > However, changed the USB cable all is fine now but the question is: > > I was used to have 150cm standard USB cable which is recommended, but > after replacing it with 120cm cable problem went away? > > What are the recommended cable length and brand-made types? > > >
From: kimiraikkonen on 25 Jul 2007 16:26 On Jul 22, 4:20 am, Barry Watzman <WatzmanNOS...(a)neo.rr.com> wrote: > The issue isn't so much length as quality. I have had cases where a > given cable just would not work with a given device. The replacement > cable worked fine ... even if it was longer. > > > > kimiraikkonen wrote: > > However, changed the USB cable all is fine now but the question is: > > > I was used to have 150cm standard USB cable which is recommended, but > > after replacing it with 120cm cable problem went away? > > > What are the recommended cable length and brand-made types?- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - Barry, you're right, sorry for late response. I changed the USB cable probably more quality one, worked fine. However the previous (crappy) cable claims that it's usb 2.0 and it just about 1,5 USD then i bought a better cable which is worth 6 dollars... But the result is fine, the new cable is a bit shorter than old (120 cm) but i couldn't understand i surprised that usually scanners *not printers* choose cables according to themselves and they are not cable-friendly. They require quality cables where there are a lot of china-made crappy ones...
From: Beno�t-Nicole Morrissette on 2 Aug 2007 18:53 On Fri, 20 Jul 2007 05:33:46 -0700, kimiraikkonen <kimiraikkonen85(a)gmail.com> wrote: >Hi, > >But nowadays, i'm receiving error "cannot communicate with scanner" >which is very common error about Canon's Twain driver. snip... >Regards. Replace your computer power supply with a beefier one. Many scannrs draws a lot of power and USB is limited to 500mA. As you add more gadgets on your computer, the less current is available. The same thing goes for aging power supplies. After adding a new video card in my computer, my CanoScan Lide 70 could not "communicate" anymore with my machine. After replacing my 300W power supply with a 550W one, it work well again! Replacing the USB cable with a high quality one might work too: the bigger the cable, the less resistive they are and the more current to the scanner you have... Beno�t-Nicole Morrissette
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