I answer my own question. In a first attempt to get support from the technical s ervice, I was told I had to send the scanner in and they might have to send it to Denmark. In a recent contact they g ave me a cost estimate of around $ 3K for a servicing in Denmark, which was about or even more than the actual scan ner value. Quite stubborn nature, I've recently been digging out an old basic plug'in for that scanner that scans into memory instead of scanning to disk. I installed and used it with amazing disappearence of the lines. After I c ontacted and informed the technical service who transmitted to ScanView, I was given the following hint: deleting al l the scanner software preferences from the preferences folder in my computer. I did so and found a healthy scanner in no time (reinstalling software just wasn't enough). It took a year and a lot of vain attempts before I got the right advice. Fortunate enough that I did not depend on it for my daily bread! There was a post yesterday on traditional versu s computerized photography. The electronic is great, but if it is always possible to fix an enlarger, when it co mes to electronics...one has to depend upon obscure, expensive services or spend much time and energy trying to find th e way out. Oh, analog photography has it's bugs too. Just two weeks ago, I had my lab have a tray unhook in the E6 chain and half of the sheets from a week trip 400 km away where totally washed out. Never mind, next time success ma y be there!