Hi Jason, it's looking pretty good, but this one (white) shows up pretty bright, and you're going to get some glare from that. I'm guessing that this is a flat-bed scanner too? You probably don't need to scan any more than 300 DPI. Good quality, decent image, but doesn't take too long to scan when you may have (hundreds) lots to scan in if I'm guessing correctly?
OK, for another 2c of advice - if you're comfortable with working around your PC and one thought is scan as many as you can fit in there with plenty of spacing min 1/4" and max 1/2" between each chip so you'll then spend less time scanning your chips - then bring up that picture in MS Paint - then you can select each chip do a copy (to your clip board) then paste into a new file then do a 'save as' and that will probably save you a bunch of time doing it that way. Probably 20 chips at a scan may work.
So, what I've found with my flat-bed (Epson bottom-of the line flatbed scanner) is just scan it a couple times, and pick the best of the two and move on.
Good luck with the website (I have a site of my own as well) and be sure to share your link with others when you get it going!
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