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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Dental-CAD
Dental I/O scan workflows
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<blockquote data-quote="DSDL" data-source="post: 366951" data-attributes="member: 25209"><p>Sorry if this is not the appriopriate thread, but the medit scans that I receive contain much more distortion/digital "flash" than other scanners. I'm not talking about regular surface noise or bumpiness, Im talking about varios portions of the scan that are fully offset by like .4mm, or splattered with weird distorted skirting. It is qualitatively unique and distinctive to medit scans that come through. Not sure how else I might describe it, but I'm wondering if this sounds familiar to others? I'm at a loss on advice, other than to tell the doctors: Make sure area is dry, make sure you go slow and rescan areas as necessary, scrutinize that scan with color OFF so you can see texture only... Is there some kind of scanner setting that doctors can adjust--maybe with the way the scans are stitched/exported/finalized? Thanks</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DSDL, post: 366951, member: 25209"] Sorry if this is not the appriopriate thread, but the medit scans that I receive contain much more distortion/digital "flash" than other scanners. I'm not talking about regular surface noise or bumpiness, Im talking about varios portions of the scan that are fully offset by like .4mm, or splattered with weird distorted skirting. It is qualitatively unique and distinctive to medit scans that come through. Not sure how else I might describe it, but I'm wondering if this sounds familiar to others? I'm at a loss on advice, other than to tell the doctors: Make sure area is dry, make sure you go slow and rescan areas as necessary, scrutinize that scan with color OFF so you can see texture only... Is there some kind of scanner setting that doctors can adjust--maybe with the way the scans are stitched/exported/finalized? Thanks [/QUOTE]
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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Dental-CAD
Dental I/O scan workflows
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