Thanks for the posting the picture of your scanner - that helps. (Good work, BTW!)
If you open that book that is pictured in your scanner to the exact middle of the book, then ensure that the spine is supported against the flat cradle bottom, can you then get the platen to go down into the gutter, flattening the pages, and get a quality shot? I'm wondering how much of the problem you're seeing is because the spine isn't supported at the correct angle to ensure that the platen apex can press into the gutter evenly between the two pages?
From just looking at that book in the cradle, it would seem like it would press against the platen sides as you forced the book into the platen because the pages are a bit wrinkly, making the stack of pages on the left and right of the platen rather "spongey".
You have different design requirements compared to most folks who are building scanners. The thick old warped, wrinkly books with notes near the gutter may require something special in the cradle/platen design to get you the images that you need. What ends up working for these type of books may very well be overkill, or even non-optimal for scanning books that aren't in this same condition. For example, those rollers would work OK for hard-backed books, but something with a cover that is more flexible would bend outward over the roller and likely not contact the platen near the outer edge of the page (most of my software reference books are this style and I wouldn't want to be forced to resort to scanning in paperback mode for these). This discussion reminds me that I need to make a note to swing by the local public library and look for some thick (3"-4") books to try a few ideas I've had for a self-leveling cradle.
If you absolutely want to get in tight to the book's gutter, a single page scanner will do it. You can make the platen angle less than 90 deg (how much depends on your camera lens viewing angle) and that will make the platen "knife" into the gutter a bit tighter. 1600 pages would be a bear to scan one at a time though. Just thought I'd throw the idea out there if you can't find any other way to get the results you require. Or maybe that's an option for a few of the more troublesome pages?
BTW, how do you like the T2i cameras for scanning? I'm considering moving to these eventually because of the lens quality, remote software, and absolute control that they offer over the digital compact cameras. Any complaints other than having to do intermediate file transfers due to the large size of the RAW images?
