Thanks for the tip on using the newer version of enblend. I have not 
stitched enough since switching to say if it has solved the problem or not, 
but I have not seen it yet so I am hopeful.


Another possibility is that neighbouring images overlap so much that, 
> despite A being largely to the left of B, some parts of remapped A are off 
> to the right of B, again giving them the chance to appear in the final 
> composite when they should be covered up (this isn't likely in your single 
> row pano).
>
Actually I think that may be exactly what happened. That pano and the 
others are full 360 by 180s and the down row can have a lot of over 
excessive overlap. 

>
> Putting the images in shot order or overlapping a little less could stop 
> the first case happening. Or you could use <a href="
> http://horman.net/multiblend";>multiblend</a> ;)
>
> I am very interested in multiblend. The idea of something that is as much 
faster as it claims to be has my full interest but I have not been able to 
figure out how to get hugin to use it. I have put it in the bin folder but 
after that I am at a loss as far as how to tell hugin to use it. There are 
some settings under preferences that look like they should do the trick, 
but near as I can tell when I change them it is still using enblend. Any 
tips on how to install multiblend so that hugin will use it?

Thanks all,
Brandon
 

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