Hi, @jodmcc49, Good information and screenshots. Always helpful.
But we have to back up a bit. Acrobat has no scanning capability whatsoever. Rather, Apple provides a link from its scanning application, Image Capture, to other applications, such as Photoshop or Acrobat. This is different from what PCs have, which is software called Twain that provides a link between applications and the scanner's software. There's a big difference because just about any scanner's software is better than Image Capture. I've been on Macs since '86 and have used scanners since around '90. When you compare what Image Capture can do versus what your scanner's software can do, you'll probably never look at Image Capture again.
So, the next question is, how do I digitize my documents, photos, or anything else I need to scan? The answer is simple: Use your scanner's software. Here's a basic process.
Scan with your scanner’s software, save your scans in the TIF format, and leave the files on your desktop (or wherever convenient). Then, you can drag the files onto the Acrobat icon in the Dock. If you save the files as TIF images, Acrobat will automatically OCR them; there's nothing else you have to do. If you drag more than one file onto the Acrobat icon, Acrobat will ask you if you want all of these files merged into one document or to remain separate. (If you save in any other format, the auto OCR dynamic will not happen, and you'll need to add to your workload by adding an OCR step to your activities.)
Some extra tips and bits of information: A full-page, 300 ppi, 8-bit TIF file will be about 8 MB. (16-bit will be about 16 MB); once they are processed into a PDF, they will drop down to about 100-150 kb, so do not worry about the size. Assuming that you've done a pre-scan to set the Levels settings to get a clean image and you're doing a stack of pages from the same source, there's no need to do subsequent pre-scans. The first scan will be “document.tif.” The 2nd document will be “document (2).tif,” the third will be “document (3).tif.”, etc. When you process those in Acrobat, the first scanned page will end at the end of the PDF as the last page. You can either fix this in the "Organize Pages" or, before processing in Acrobat, change the name in the Finder for “document.tif” to “document (1).tif."*
* There's no way around this because it is up to Finder or Explorer to name it, not the scanning software. FWIW, I use this latter approach.
Lastly, if you want to get into the details of this and learn how to get the best-quality scan and, thereby, the best-quality OCR, check out this blog I wrote for Adobe a number of years ago.
https://community.adobe.com/t5/adobe-community-professionals/scanning-clean-searchable-pdfs/m-p/4785435?page=1#M89
Good luck.
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