Thank all of you for your replies to my question on the mems height record. In view of the volume of responses and to avoid my clogging up your mail-boxes unnecessarily while answering those who were kind enough to reply, I thought I'd try a group reply. In reading the responses, I realise I did not phrase the first sentence and the question well. My research interest is, at this point, in mems array structures that have controllable motion out-of-the-plane. I really am interested in height combined with lateral motion. Most folks told me about height but not about lateral motion. Mems I took to mean fabricated by a lithographic process and not by post-fab assembly. I guess I have a narrow-minded definition but " 'tis mine own", though I respect those who are striving for a more precise definition. The LIGA process though excellent technology for thick structures such as shown in those beautiful gears does not, as far as I know, allow structures with motion orthogonal to the plane of the wafer (although I suppose you could tilt the gears relative to a base plane). Assembly of spikes of the same or dissimilar material, like the "glop" idea, sounds terrific and I thank you for making me look at the process in a new way. Devices that overhang the chip don't really apply because, to make a two-dimensional array they would have to be sliced up and assembled on edge precisely; which would be real tough to do. In summary, I received a lot of interesting replies that are causing me to read further and differently and for that I thank you all. Peter Will