Thanks. What does that mean, and why does it break the photo?
Like I said in the previous post. I think it might have been intended as an IR dust removal channel (dust specs show up on film in IR light while the film itself is "black")
Not sure why they left it in. Especially since it doesn;t seem to hold any IR info anyway. It's completely black and thus useless.
So in short, I have no idea why it's there or what it's supposed to do.
I'm guessing there is a bug in the thumbnail software of Windows. Like I said, TIFF is such a free format and not all software fully supports it and all it's features.
:edit: OK it's not a multipage TIFF. It's a 4 layer image. Which explains the odd 32 bit color depth that you mentiond. It's actually a 24 bit RGB image and a fully black 8 bit alpha channel.
Still, I guess it's just a bug where the Microstf TIFF library can't handle the extra layer. Now that I think about it I sometimes had to remove the IR layer too for some software to work with the TIF files.