I think it will be a very welcome addition !Fabrice wrote:It may arrive soon.but if there were some way to add a new FX node which automated the process of aligning peg holes that would be a nice additional function to have.

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By the way , for anyone looking for an ADF scanner , a former student of mine named Dan Caylor alerted me to the existence of a new 11" x 17" size scanner for under $300.00 USD ! --- the Brother MFC-6490 CW scanner. (Dan got his for $250.00 USD with a mail-in rebate coupon. The list price is between $275 - to - $375 USD depending on who is selling it. Most sellers in the U.S. seem to be selling it for around $299.00 USD.) This is really unheard of to have a scanner that is so inexpensive, which will handle 12 Field animation paper , fed through an auto-document feeder for very fast scanning . Most 11" x 17" ADF scanners cost $3,000 or more. Combined with an Auto Peg Hole Recognition system like the one that is coming in TVP , this new Brother MFC-6490 CW scanner will be very useful to animators who still like to work on paper. The Brother MFC-6490 CW scanner is aimed at the small business and home-office user, so I doubt that it is built to hold up for a long time under heavy feature film or tv production use, but for the student or the independent animator on a tight budget this product at least puts an 11" x 17" scanner within an affordable price range. At this price you could replace it several times over before it would cost you as much as the usual 11 x 17 ADF scanners from Epson, Fujitsu, Ricoh, etc.
Here is Dan's recommendation from his blog:
I recently bought a scanner to do pencil tests on, and it’s working out nicely. So I thought I’d recommend it to anyone looking at animating on paper. You’ll likely be in the market for something similar someday. I set out looking for an Auto Document Feed scanner that could handle 12 Field paper (10.5” x 12.5”). This meant I had three criteria in my search: 1.) It had to be cheap because I’m a student, 2.) it had to have ADF so I could spend more time animating (learning), and 3.) it had to be Wide Format so I could fit the animation paper in it. To make a long story short, after searching the internet, and checking out every store in town, I settled on this: the Brother MFC-6490 CW . It matched all my criteria, most important of which was cost, only setting me back $250. That’s a steal considering the prices for these kinds of scanners used to be in the thousands of dollars range.
When I need to test my work, I just stack everything in the tray on top, and my pencil test is ready in a few minutes. I remember doing a tests with a camera back in film school, and how long that took. So much time was wasted that could have been used animating or learning something new. I hate wasting time, so I’m super happy with this purchase. I couldn’t find anything like this from HP, Epson, or Canon, so I think this is the only one on the market in that price range.