A+ - 220-603 - Unit 3
A+ - 220-603 - Unit 3
A+ - 220-603 - Unit 3
# Objective
Components
A dot-matrix printer uses a print head that usually contains 9 or 24 pins. The pins are
pushed forward in patterns to form letters, numbers, and other shapes. The pins strike an
inked ribbon, and the ribbon strikes the paper.
9-pin printers produce low-quality images. Some printers print over the same area after
moving the paper slightly to overprint between the first set of dots, thus improving the
print quality. 24-pin printers have smaller pins closer together, so they produce a finer
image than a 9-pin printer does.
The paper is pulled through the printer using a tractor feed or friction. A tractor feed
uses a sprocket to mesh with holes in the side of continuous form paper. The sprockets
turn, pulling the paper through the printer. Friction feed uses single sheets of paper. The
roller is held tight against the print head and the paper moves through. Typewriters use
friction feed. Most printers have a lever to choose between using the tractor feed or
friction feed.
The continuous form paper usually has perforations at 11-inch or 14-inch intervals. This
enables the paper to be separated into standard sized pages. It usually has perforations
along the side, so that the tractor holes can be removed from the sides of the pages as
well. When setting up the paper in the printer, it’s therefore necessary to align the top of
the page with the print head so that pages don’t print across the perforations.
Banners are often printed on dot-matrix printers using continuous feed paper. Banners
can be printed on perforated paper, usually without worrying about whether the paper is
at the top of the first page. You might also print it on paper that has no perforations
between sheets.
Multipart forms are the main use of dot-matrix printers now that other printer types have
become more affordable and easier to use. The forms can be preprinted or blank.
Preprinted forms require careful alignment so that the print falls in the boxes or on the
lines of the forms.
Friction feed is usually used for envelopes and other single sheet papers. Some dot-
matrix printers include a paper tray from which single sheets are fed, but more often,
you must insert the single sheet, set the lever for friction feed, and print each page one
at a time.
Connections
Dot-matrix printers usually have either a serial or parallel interface connection. These
printers were the usual choice for users when personal computers were first introduced,
when interfaces such as USB, infrared, FireWire, and other more recent interfaces
hadn’t yet been introduced. It’s also rare to find a dot-matrix printer with a built-in
network interface. Some printers have both serial and parallel interfaces, so that the user
can make a choice.
Options
Dot-matrix printers don’t usually have a lot of optional features. However, some have
slots for adding font cards, memory, or additional paper feeders so that the paper can
easily be switched from single sheet to continuous form paper.
3 What are the paper feed mechanisms typically used on dot-matrix printers?
Thermal bubble technology heats the ink, which vaporizes it, creating a bubble. The
bubble protrudes out through the nozzle, and sprays onto the paper. When the bubble
bursts, it creates a vacuum which draws more ink from the cartridge into the print head,
readying it to create another dot.
Piezoelectric technology creates a bubble with a piezo crystal behind each nozzle. An
electrical current sent to the crystal causes it to vibrate. When it vibrates inward, it
releases ink onto the paper; when it vibrates outward, it pulls ink from the cartridge.
Ink cartridges are the reservoirs in which ink for inkjet printers is held. The number of
cartridges varies from printer to printer, but most have a black cartridge and then a
color-color cartridge with compartments for yellow, cyan, and magenta, often referred
to as CYMK (cyan, yellow, magenta, and black). Some printers have separately
replaceable cartridges for each of the colors. Some have more colors than these three
basic ones. Some inexpensive printers don’t have a separate black cartridge. Instead,
when black is required, they mix all three colors together to produce a dark color.
Exhibit 0-2 shows examples of inkjet cartridges. In this case, there’s a single color
cartridge that contains the cyan, yellow, and magenta inks. There’s a separate black
cartridge.
Shades of each of the basic colors are often produced using dithering, which is also
known as half-tones. By varying the pattern of dots, as well as the density of the dots,
you can make a color appear to be more saturated or darker. Newspapers use this
method to print photos.
The print head on an inkjet printer is usually part of the ink cartridge. Since this is the
part of a printer that wears out the soonest, having it replaced each time you replace the
ink means you always have a good print head. This also makes the cartridges more
expensive. If the print head is part of the printer rather than the cartridge, the cartridges
are usually less expensive, but after a couple of years, you might notice that the print
quality has degraded. Exhibit 0-3 shows the print head on an inkjet cartridge.
Exhibit 0-3: Inkjet cartridge print heads
There are usually between 300 and 600 separate nozzles on a print head, corresponding
to a 300 to 600 DPI printer. This is the standard for thermal bubble printers.
Piezoelectric printers can print 720 x 720 DPI. Enhancements through the software
drivers can raise the DPI by having the print head move fractionally so that dots can be
placed between existing dots on the page. Thus, a 600 DPI printer can produce 1200
DPI images and a 720 DPI printer can print images at 1440x720.
The print head moves across the page printing columns of pixels at a time. To increase
the resolution, a second pass is made across the page to overwrite between the existing
dots. On some printers, printing occurs on both passes across the page—left to right and
right to left. On others, it prints only in one direction, and as the stepper motor advances
the page, the print head moves back across the page to begin printing the next line.
Visit www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/artjan99/inkjet.html for close-up photos and
information about inkjet print cartridges and heads. The page is a bit dated, but it still
provides interesting and relevant information about how inkjet print heads work.
Print quality
Inkjet printers were a major improvement over the quality offered by dot-matrix
printers. The ink dots could be grouped much closer together than the pins in the dot-
matrix printer. The standard against which inkjet printers are compared was originally
the laser printer, the output of which was considered very high-quality. This is still true
for text output. Now, with advances in inkjet technology, traditional, analog,
chemically-produced darkroom photographs have become the standard against which
quality is compared.
In addition to purchasing a printer with a higher DPI to ensure high-quality output, your
choice of paper on which to print affects the quality of the output. Regular copier paper
doesn’t produce as clear of an image as specially-coated inkjet paper does. The ink
bleeds out on regular paper, creating fuzzy edges to characters and images. Coated
inkjet paper has a waxy layer that the ink sits on, thus preventing bleed-out of the ink.
Attempting to print on a shiny surface such as a transparency can also prove difficult if
the wrong type of transparency plastic is used. The ink might not dry properly and could
smudge on the kind of transparency plastic used to write on with markers. Transparency
sheets with a special textured coating allow the ink to adhere and dry properly.
The ink in most inkjet cartridges is water soluble. This can be a problem if your
printouts get wet. Being caught in the rain with a poster containing images printed from
an inkjet printer can result in the ink running down the page. You can purchase
waterproof inks for some inkjet printers.
Some printers are designed just for printing photos. These are often small printers that
can print 4 x 6-inch or smaller photos on specialty paper.
Paper path
Some inkjet printers have a paper tray behind the printer and pull the paper through the
printer on a straight-through paper path. This setup leads to fewer paper jams and is
good for heavy paper stock. Exhibit 0-5 shows a straight-through paper path in an inkjet
printer.
Other printers store the paper in a tray below and to the front of the printer then pull the
paper up through rollers and under the print head. Printers using this technology pull the
paper up through an S-curve or a U-curve. Exhibit 0-6 shows a curved paper path in an
inkjet printer.
3 The print head moves across the page and prints columns of pixels. True or false?
4 You can print photos on any paper, but some papers enable you to print higher-
quality images than others do. True or false?
The price on a laser printer is now nearing the price of a good inkjet printer. As with
inkjet printers, the manufacturer can sell the printer itself at or below cost. They make
up the cost with the consumables. For example, one $100 laser printer requires a
replacement toner cartridge that costs $90. A $300 color laser printer from this same
manufacturer requires 3 color cartridges and a black cartridge that add up to almost
$300. It varies from manufacturer to manufacturer, but on average, you should be able
to get at least 1,000 to 1,500 printouts from a cartridge. Check the specifications for the
printer you’re considering to determine the lifespan of a toner cartridge for that printer.
Laser printers produce images using an electrophotographic process. By combining
electrostatic charges, toner and laser light, high-quality images are produced, one page
at a time. The components in a laser printer include:
• Toner cartridge
• Laser scanning assembly
• Power supplies
• Paper control and transport assembly
• Transfer corona assembly
• Fusing assembly
• Electronic control package
Toner cartridge
An example of a toner cartridge is shown in Exhibit 0-8. A toner cartridge contains:
• A hopper filled with toner. Toner is a fine powder composed of plastic, iron, and
carbon particles.
• An EP drum covered with photosensitive coating that holds a static charge until
exposed to light.
• A blade to remove used toner from the drum.
• A corona charging assembly, which applies a static charge to the drum after an
image has been printed.
Component Description
Laser Shines on the drum and creates an electrostatic image of what’s printed. Creates areas
of negative charge on the positively charged drum.
Lens(es) Focuses the laser beam. Multiple lenses may be used to focus the laser beam on the
various areas of the drum: the areas being closer to or farther away from the mirror
and laser beam.
Power supplies
A high-voltage power supply (HVPS) converts 120 volt, 60 Hz AC current into high-
voltage electricity used by the EP process. A DC power supply (DCPS) is used to power
components that don’t require high voltages.
Fusing assembly
The fusing assembly is composed of rollers and a heating lamp. It applies heat and
pressure to adhere the toner permanently to the page.
Stage Description
Charging or The primary corona wire applies a negative charge of approximately -600 volts to
conditioning the EP drum.
Writing or exposing The laser beams reduces the negative charge to about -100 volts on the EP drum in
the areas that become the image to be printed.
Developing Areas of the drum that were written to by the laser attract toner.
Transferring A positive charge of about + 600 voles is applied to the paper by the transfer
corona wire.
Fusing Pressure and heat set the toner to the paper. A 350°F fusing roller melts the toner,
and squeezing the paper through a set of rollers presses the toner into the paper.
Cleaning and A rubber blade clears the excess toner from the drum. Another corona wire
erasing removes the charges from the drum.
Some sources place the cleaning and erasing stage at the beginning of the process.
Others place it at the end of the process. In either case, it prepares the drum for
receiving and printing the next image.
5 The HVPS converts 120 volt current into high voltage electricity used by the EP
process. True or false?
Direct thermal
Direct thermal printers use coated paper. A row of heating elements is used to burn dots
directly onto the paper. These are monochrome printers.
Thermal autochrome
Thermal autochrome printers use special paper in which cyan, magenta, and yellow
pigments are embedded. Each page passes three times under the thermal print head at
different temperatures. Each color is processed at a different temperature. UV light sets
the colors after each pass so that no more processing of that colors occurs on the
subsequent passes under the print head.
Plotters
Plotters are pen-based output devices that create line images. Printers create raster
images as compared to line images. Plotters are typically used to create precision
engineering documents from CAD applications. A pen in the printer moves side to side
on an X-axis as the paper moves up and down on the Y-axis.
A multi-color plotter uses multiple pens to create an image. In most cases, this is a
carousel containing 4 to 12 pens, but in some, you need to change the pen to each color
as you need it.
Plotters create lines with the pens. Other printers create lines only by spacing the dots
very close together. By using a pen, curved lines are smoother than what can be
obtained with dots.
Most plotters are used to create engineering documents. Some other industrial uses have
replaced the pens with cutting devices. These have been used in the garment industry to
cut out fabric from the computer application when it’s cut from the fabric rather than
printed. The sign industry has also used plotters with cutting devices to cut out signs
from an application outputting the sign shape to the material to be cut.
3 What base is the ink for a dye sub printer held in?
5 Dye sub printers require the use of halftones and dithering to create shades of
colors. True or false?
7 Why can a plotter make a smoother line than other types of printers?
Topic B: Printers
This topic covers the following CompTIA A+ 220-603 exam objectives.
# Objective
3.3 Identify tools, diagnostic procedures and troubleshooting techniques for printers and
scanners
• Gather information required to troubleshoot printer/scanner problems
• Troubleshoot a print failure (e.g. lack of paper, clear queue, restart print spooler, recycle
power on printer, inspect for jams, check for visual indicators)
Client processes
The client processes include:
• A print job is sent from an application by a user.
• A graphics device interface (GDI) is called by the application.
• The spooler receives the print job from the GDI.
Spooler processes
The spooler processes include:
• Winspool.drv issues an RPC to Spoolsv.exe. Winspool.drv is on the client side.
Spoolsv.exe is on the server side.
• Spoolss.dll, the print router, is called by Spoolsv.exe.
• Localspl.dll routes the print job to either the local print provider or to the remote
print server.
• Local print provider locates a print processor capable of handling the job’s data
type, and then sends the job to the print processor.
• The print processor makes any necessary modification for printing the job.
• The page separator processor receives the print job from the print processor and,
if necessary, adds a separator page.
• The job is sent either directly to the appropriate port monitor or to a language
monitor and then on to the port monitor. The port monitor is responsible for
communications between the PC and the printer. A language monitor is
responsible for translating the print job into code the printer understands.
Printer processes
The printer processes include:
• The print spooler sends the job to the printer.
• The print language is translated into information the printer can print.
2 A graphics device interface (GDI) is called by the application. Into which process
does this step fall?
3 The print language is translated into information the printer can print. Into which
process does this step fall?
4 The print processor makes any necessary modification for printing the job. Into
which process does this step fall?
Inkjet printer installation
Explanation Most printers connect via USB today, so when you connect the printer, Windows
automatically detects it and attempts to install the driver for you. Your printer likely
comes with a CD-ROM containing drivers and additional software to enhance the
printing quality. Exhibit 0-9 shows the bubble alerting you that new hardware was
found on your computer.
One useful utility that’s usually installed with a printer is a monitor for the ink levels in
the cartridges. This helps you know when ink supplies are getting low and need to be
replaced. Exhibit 0-10 shows the utility displayed when printing. Notice that it includes
information about the print job and about the ink levels in the printer.
While you can purchase kits to refill the cartridges, this usually voids the printer
warranty. If you do refill the cartridge, make sure that you get the ink that’s right for
your printer. Thermal inkjet printers need ink that can withstand high heat. Getting a
water-soluble ink for a solvent-based ink printer or vice versa can result in improper
application of the ink to the page and create a major mess. Since the print head is
contained within most print cartridges, it’s recommended that it be refilled only two or
three times.
Printer interfaces
Most inkjet printers are connected by USB interfaces today. In supporting inkjet
printers, you might encounter some that still use the parallel port interface. Even less
likely, you might encounter some with SCSI or serial interfaces. Exhibit 0-11 shows the
communications interfaces on an inkjet printer. In this case, there’s a parallel and a USB
port.
Be sure to configure the printer in Windows to use the connection type to which the
printer is connected. If it’s using SCSI, be sure to assign a unique device ID. If it’s using
parallel, be sure that you’ve specified the correct LPT port. If it’s using serial, verify
that you’ve specified the correct COM port. Exhibit 0-12 shows Device Manager
information for a printer connected to a computer.
Interfaces
Laser printers are used in a wide variety of situations. These printers have the most
widely varied connection types of any printers. Most laser printers have two or more
connection interfaces. These include parallel, SCSI, USB, serial, IEEE 1394/FireWire,
and wired or wireless Ethernet network connections. Examples of the communications
interfaces on a laser printer are shown in Exhibit 0-13.
Exhibit 0-13: Communications interfaces on a laser printer
Some interfaces also include network connections, infrared ports, and wireless
connections. A network connection enables the printer to be connected directly to the
network without being connected to a computer, such as a print server. Print servers can
make multiple printers available to network users. Infrared and other wireless
technologies, such as Bluetooth and 801.11, enable users with computers equipped with
compatible interfaces to print to the printer without the need to connect the printer and
computer physically with a cable.
To install a laser printer, connect the printer to the network or a computer using the
correct interface, and then plug it in and power it up. If you’re connecting it to a
Windows computer, Windows will likely recognize that you’ve connected a new device
and install drivers for it automatically. If drivers aren’t installed automatically, you can
do it manually using the materials that shipped with the printer.
To upgrade a device driver, in Device Manager right-click the printer and choose
Update Driver. Then complete the wizard to install the new driver. Alternately, you can
use any installation program that comes from the manufacturer.
After the printer is connected and working, you can configure options and calibrate it
for best performance. Then print a test page to verify that it’s working properly, and
verify it’s compatible with any programs or operating systems that are deployed. Also
take a few minutes to educate the user about basic printing functionality and leave
documentation if it’s available.
Do it! B-2: Installing a printer
Here’s how Here’s why
1 Connect the power cord to the You’ll install either an inkjet printer or a laser
printer, but don’t turn it on printer on your computer.
2 Connect the interface cable to the The interface cable will vary based on the
printer connection type the printer uses. Most current
printers are USB printers, but some also have
parallel or serial ports, and some have SCSI
ports.
3 Plug the power cord into an If possible, this should be on a surge protector
electrical outlet strip.
4 Connect the interface cable to the The port will vary based on the connection type
computer the printer is using.
6 Select Yes, this time only You could select the other options, but for
classroom purposes, we’ll choose this option.
Click Next
Click Next
10 Select the appropriate option If you have the drivers on CD or floppy disk or
have downloaded them, select Search for the
best driver in these locations, then check the
appropriate option. If the driver is included with
the operating system, you can choose Don’t
search. I will choose the driver to install.
If appropriate, cancel the wizard, Some printers require that you install software
then install the software from the from the CD or from a download rather than
appropriate location installing the driver through the Add Hardware
wizard.
11 Click Start, Printers and Your newly installed printer should be listed.
Faxes
Choose Properties
16 Right-click the printer and choose You would use this wizard to upgrade the device
Update Driver… driver.
Another option you might encounter is additional paper trays. These allow you to leave
the paper in the paper tray and select which tray to feed from when you want to print.
Other printers enable you to leave the paper in the paper tray and hand feed a single
sheet of paper or an envelope or postcard through an alternate paper path.
Some printers come with holders for printing on smaller media or on unconventional
media such as CDs. The sensors often detect a paper jam if you try to feed envelopes or
small media through the normal paper path, so these holders enable the sensor to see a
full size sheet going through. Exhibit 0-15 shows an example of an add-on for printing
CDs with an inkjet printer.
Inkjet printers
The main thing you need to do to keep an inkjet printer working properly is to change
the cartridge when the ink gets low. You usually have a visual warning from either
lights on the printer, a software utility, or just poor quality output. Always be sure to use
recommended supplies when replacing consumables or parts.
In some cases, you might have to clean the print nozzles and recalibrate the printer. You
can do this by simply following manufacturer’s instructions, which will have you use
the buttons on the printer or a Windows utility. Then print a test page to verify
functionality.
You can tell when one of the colors is low; often the output doesn’t match the colors on
the screen even remotely. For example, the output might all have a pink cast to it if the
blue or yellow ink is low, but the red is still going strong.
Color matching is one area that printer manufacturers continue to improve on. The
colors used on a monitor are based on a different color scheme (RGB) from that of the
printers (CYMK). The results are usually close to what you see on screen but might
need to be adjusted a bit when you see the actual output. Some printers come with
utilities to adjust the calibration of ink output to match your desired output more
closely.
Keeping the inkjet printer’s environment properly ventilated helps the printer last longer
as well. Adequate ventilation keeps the printer from overheating. Another
environmental concern is keeping dust out of the printer. Most inkjet printers have a
very open design, which allows dust to gather inside the printer. This can result in stray
marks on the paper, the overheating of elements, and other such problems.
When working with inkjet printers, be sure to take certain safety precautions. These
include practicing ESD safe practices, keeping dangling jewelry and neckties out of the
printer, and handling ink cartridges so as not to damage their print heads. Also, if you’re
clearing a paper jam, be careful about not damaging the printer, the cartridges, or
yourself.
Laser printers
Laser printers generally require more maintenance than inkjet printers. Laser printer
maintenance can include:
• Replacing cartridges.
• Cleaning internal components. (Be sure to follow safety procedures.) Follow the
manufacturer’s guidelines for cleaning components
• Replacing components as recommended by the manufacturer. Often the
components will come in a special maintenance kits that you can obtain from the
manufacturer. Some manufacturers recommend installing maintenance kits after
a specified duration or number of printed pages to keep the printer operating
smoothly. After installing the maintenance kit, you may have to reset page
count. Check with your manufacturer.
When replacing components, take some time to clean out any accumulated toner and
paper dust inside the printer. This will prevent the debris from hindering printer
operations, and it will keep a clean printing environment. Often manufacturer’s
maintenance kits will include cleaning materials.
Be sure the printer is well ventilated and situated securely on a flat surface, and keep the
printer trays full. Try to use only recommended supplies. Remember to follow
appropriate safety precautions when working with the laser printer.
Do it! B-4: Performing printer maintenance
Here’s how Here’s why
1 Turn off and unplug your printer You’re going to perform some routine
maintenance on your printer. Be sure to use only
recommended supplies when replacing parts.
4 If you have a laser printer, follow This can include removing accumulated toner,
the manufacturer’s cleaning and paper dust, and cleaning internal components.
maintenance instructions
7 Plug in the printer and print a test To verify the printer is working properly.
page
Option Description
Orientation Portrait (narrow dimension is the top of page) or landscape (wide dimension is
the top of the page)
Collation How the individual pages within a multipage document are printed when you
print more than one copy. Collated means entire copies of the document are
printed together. Uncollated means that all the copies of page 1 are printed
before all the copies of page 2, and so forth.
Quality Options for draft, normal, or high quality on some printers. Others offer
varying resolutions.
Color You can specify if the document should print in full color or in black-and-
white. There might also be options for color matching software to be used, if
such software was installed with your printer.
Order Some printers allow you to specify whether to print from last page to first or
first page to last on multipage print jobs.
5 Close all open windows and Do not save the Notepad document.
dialog boxes
6 Click Start, and choose To open the Printers and Faxes window.
Printers and Faxes
8 Select “Start printing after To configure the printer to print only when the
last page has spooled” entire document you’re printing has been
spooled. This can optimize printing when a user
frequently print large documents with many
graphics.
9 Click OK
Item Description
Printer drivers If you’re encountering problems with the printing of a document and have
determined to the best of your ability that there’s no physical problem with the
printer or between the printer and the computer, then it’s time to check that the
correct printer driver has been installed. You should also check whether an updated
driver is available for the printer. Print test pages as needed.
Error messages On dot-matrix printers, the error messages are usually shown as blinking lights. Refer
to your printer documentation for what the blink pattern indicates.
Memory Dot-matrix printers rarely have any memory installed in them and instead rely on the
print job being stored on the computer. If the drive is filled, this can result in lost
jobs. It’s also another reason why the printer is slow, as it needs to receive jobs piece
by piece from the computer rather than reading from internal memory.
Configuration There isn’t usually much configuration that you can do for a dot-matrix printer, but if
it uses font cartridges or other additional features, you might need to configure
something on the printer or in software to alert Windows that the feature is available.
That isn’t usually the case, though. If the feature is available, the printer makes use of
it if needed.
Item Description
Connections If the printer can’t be found, verify that the cable is securely connected to the printer
and to the computer. Also, verify that the correct cable is being used. If your printer
has both a serial and a parallel connection available, make sure that Windows is
trying to access the printer through the correct port. Also, verify that it’s trying to
access the correct LPT or COM port.
Print quality Most dot-matrix printers have options on the control panel to set the default print
quality. Windows print drivers are usually configured to print high quality as well. If
the print quality is poor, check whether the ribbon needs to be replaced. The ink gets
used up or dried out after a time.
Inkjet problems
Despite your best efforts to keep your printer clean and in working order, you’re likely
to encounter problems at some point. Most inkjet printers aren’t designed for high
volume usage. Therefore, if they’re used in a business setting with a high volume of
print traffic, you’re even more likely to encounter problems.
Cost of consumables
Inkjet printers are inexpensive devices, so it’s often more cost effective to replace the
printer rather than spend a lot of time trying to figure out how to fix it.
The cost of ink cartridges can be about the same price as the printer. Manufacturers
often sell printers at or below cost, knowing that they’ll make up for the loss on the ink
cartridges. Manufacturers have moved the print head to the cartridge, so that the cost is
borne in the consumables rather than in the initial purchase of the printer.
If an inkjet printer is a high-volume printer, there’s a good chance it’ll wear out rather
quickly. It’s usually more cost effective to use a laser printer for high volume. The cost
per page for printing with an inkjet printer is roughly 10 times the cost of printing with a
laser or dot-matrix printer.
Nothing prints
If nothing prints when you send a print job, there are several reasons this might occur.
Verify that the print job is getting to the print queue in Windows. You can do this by
double-clicking the icon for the printer in Printers and Faxes. You can also try clearing
the queue and sending new print jobs using a basic text editor, such as Notepad.
If there are jobs are listed in the queue, but the printer isn’t printing, look for these
issues:
• Printer isn’t turned on.
• Printer is out of paper.
• Printer isn’t connected via the interface cable.
• Ink cartridge(s) are empty or clogged.
• Printer isn’t configured for the correct interface.
Poor print quality or stray lines
Poor print quality can be due to a clogged print head, using porous paper that allows the
ink to bleed out on the page, or dust in the printer. It can also be that Draft mode was
selected on the printer or in Windows through the print driver software.
Stray lines on the page can be due to clogged nozzles, worn print guides, or worn print
heads. You might need to print a test pattern and clean or realign the print heads.
Using the incorrect or an incompatible print driver can also result in strange output. The
output might not be quite right if it’s a driver that’s close to what your printer expects,
or it might print just garbage if it’s completely different from what your printer can
interpret.
Paper jams
Humidity affects the paper and how well it moves through the paper path. Paper that’s
damp from humidity sticks together, and the printer might try to pull several sheets
through at once. This often results in part of the image being printed across the tops of
several pages, and then the end-of-paper sensor is confused since more than 11.5-inches
of paper came through. The printer then begins flashing lights regarding an error.
Safety issues
Before attempting to work on a laser printer, be aware of some of the environmental
factors that exist inside of the printer. The toner can be toxic if inhaled at high levels.
Spilled toner is very messy and easily stains skin, clothing, and various plastic or other
materials. You should use latex or rubber gloves and possibly a mask over your mouth
and nose when working with toner.
In addition, printers contain high voltage power supplies, so you need to take special
care when working around them. The fusing assembly also becomes very hot, so if
you’re working inside the printer, you need to let it cool down a bit so that you don’t
burn yourself.
Paper jams
The paper path in a laser printer is usually an S-curved path with rollers guiding the
paper. If the rollers aren’t working properly at one point or another over the course of
the paper path, the paper doesn’t move along as it should. In some cases, sensors in the
printer detect that the paper isn’t moving, and an error is issued. Upon opening the
printer, you find the paper just sitting there and can easily remove it, but sending
another page through results in the same problem.
Other times, no sensor is triggered, but when another sheet of paper comes through the
paper path, it encounters the first piece of paper, and since the rollers are only designed
to grab one sheet of paper at a time, the second sheet won’t fit through, and becomes a
crumpled mess.
Another common reason for paper jams is humidity levels. Humidity levels above 50%
may result in pages that stick together. Humidity levels below 25% results in paper with
static, and as you know from the laser printer process, static electricity is used to create
images. Try to keep the paper in its wrapper in a controlled environment until you’re
ready to use it. This helps keep the paper from being too wet or too dry.
Another static problem you might encounter is that the corona wire is damaged or worn
out. If this is the case, the paper isn’t discharged and can stick to the drum, causing a
paper jam.
All or nothing
Sometimes, you send a print job to the printer, and nothing ever makes it into the
printer. It just sits in the queue waiting for the printer. You look at the printer, and it
appears to be ready to accept print jobs. This could be due to a problem with the cable
or, if it’s connected directly to a network, with the network cable or NIC.
If the page comes out all black or all white, obviously you have a problem. If the page
comes out blank, look for a problem with the toner cartridge, a broken corona wire, or a
non-working HVPS.
Toner cartridge problems are usually either an empty toner cartridge or one that needs to
be rocked. You can often get more life out of a cartridge that the printer says is empty
just by redistributing the toner within the cartridge. The system also thinks there is no
toner if the strips of sealing tape aren’t removed before the cartridge is installed. Even if
no error message is issued for this problem, no toner is released either, and the result is
a blank page. If the HVPS isn’t working, then the charging and discharging corona
wires aren’t properly charged, and the toner isn’t sticking to the paper as it should.
If the page comes out completely black, the drum isn’t being charged, so the toner sticks
to it everywhere instead of just where the image should be created. This is usually the
result of a broken corona wire or a faulty HVPS.
Garbage prints
You go to the printer expecting to see your output—a spreadsheet or a letter, perhaps—
but instead, you find several pages with a few characters at the top of each page: some
letters and numbers, and possibly some characters from the extended ASCII character
set.
If it hasn’t happened to you yet, it’s either because you haven’t used a laser printer or
you’ve been incredibly careful about making sure you had the correct print driver, and
you haven’t encountered a printer with a damaged formatter board.
This problem is usually the result of using an incorrect or incompatible printer driver.
The printer needs to be able to translate the document you want printed into the correct
codes to create the desired output. There are two common languages used to do this:
PCL and PostScript.
PCL is the printer control language used in HP laser jet printers. It’s also been licensed
to other printer manufacturers. PostScript is a page description language. These are two
distinct languages, and if the printer has been configured to use one or the other of
these, and the driver isn’t correctly installed, you won’t get the desired output.
Most printers can automatically switch back and forth between PCL and PostScript.
This ability requires having the printer configured to do so and using a print driver that
can do so as well.
Another possible problem occurs if you have upgraded the firmware and its code is
incompatible with the printer. This could result in a printer printing garbage or just not
working at all.
Do it! B-6: Troubleshooting printer problems
Here’s how Here’s why
1 Determine if you can successfully One or more problems were introduced into
print a document from Notepad. your system. You need to resolve the
problem(s).
3 Determine if the print quality of You might need to perform some printer
the page is acceptable maintenance to resolve print quality problems.
# Objective
3.1 3.1 Identify the fundamental principles of using printers and scanners
• Describe processes used by printers and scanners including laser, ink dispersion, impact,
solid ink and thermal printers.
3.3 3.3 Identify tools, diagnostic procedures and troubleshooting techniques for printers and
scanners
• Gather information required to troubleshoot printer/scanner problems
Explanation Scanners convert pictures or text to digital data. Scanners can be standalone devices or
part of a multifunction printer device. Multifunction devices usually include printer,
scanner, fax, and copier functions.
Most standalone scanners are flatbed scanners. You place the document or picture to be
scanned on a glass surface under a cover. This is works much like an office copier
machine. Exhibit 0-16 shows an example of a flatbed scanner.
If you’re supporting older equipment, you might also encounter hand-held scanners.
These devices are dragged across the paper as the device scans the page. A user had to
take care to drag early hand-held scanners at a constant rate or the resulting image
would be distorted. Later models used gears or other sensors to match the scanning rate
to the drag rate so that you didn’t have to be so precise when dragging it.
Many scanners support the TWAIN standard, as do many imaging applications. For
example, if your scanner supports TWAIN, you can use features within Adobe
Photoshop, Ulead PhotoImpact, and a lot of other applications to control your scanner.
Incidentally, TWAIN is not an acronym but is drawn from the phrase “never the twain
shall meet.” That sentiment reflected the difficulty at the time of connecting computers
and scanners, which TWAIN was supposed to ease.
Most scanners also come with specific software to work with the scanner. Such software
is typically more full-featured than that provided through the TWAIN interface.
When installing a scanner, be sure it’s located on a firm, flat surface in a well ventilated
area.
Connections
Scanners used to be either slow parallel port devices or SCSI devices that were
temperamental and not easily configured. Current offerings are mostly USB or FireWire
devices that are plug-and-play compatible.
After making the connection, plug in the scanner. You’re likely to be prompted to install
the appropriate drivers for your scanner. Alternatively, your scanner might want you to
install software that ships with the scanner and then connect the scanner to your
computer. Check the documentation to determine the proper procedure for connecting
the scanner you’re using.
To update the device driver, in Device Manager right-click the scanner and choose
Update Driver, and then complete the wizard to update the driver. You can also use the
manufacturer’s installation program to install a new driver. After the scanner is
attached, you can configure the features described above, scan a test page to ensure the
scanner is working, and give the users the basics about its operation.
2 Locate a cable that’s compatible It’s likely a USB, SCSI, FireWire, or parallel
with the scanner connection port connection.
5 Install the software to create If the scanner also includes OCR software, you
scanned images can install that as well.
Feature Description
Scan resolution Sets the DPI to be used for the scanned image.
Scaling Specifies whether the image is the same size as the original or is enlarged
or reduced from the size of the original.
Image control Inverts the image (swap black and white, also referred to as a negative
image), enables color balancing, controls the brightness and contrast of the
image, rotates the image, mirrors the image.
Preview features Zoom in and out on the scan area without affecting the scanned image,
preview what the scanner will output. Preview area usually has a feature to
select a specific area of the scanned image to scan to the file or printer.
Scan Performs the scan in which the image is scanned and the output is sent to
the destination configured in the software.
When scanning pictures, you want to set the image type to color for color pictures, the
scan mode to high quality, and a resolution that matches the printer or screen resolution
where the image will output. Pictures produce very large files when you set the
resolution to a high setting, so be prepared to have enough room to save the picture. If
you’re going to e-mail the picture, keep the resolution as low as you can while still
having a useable picture; otherwise, the person you’re sending the file to might not be
able to receive it if their mail provider has a limit on the size of attachments.
Scanning text using basic scanning software produces a graphics image of the page of
text. To scan text in that can be edited and searched, you need to install optical
character recognition (OCR) software. OCR software uses a recognition engine to
interpret the text. OCR has gotten quite accurate at picking up and interpreting
typewritten text. Handwritten text is very difficult for it to read. If you use OCR, you
want to review the text carefully to determine whether the text was properly interpreted.
Do it! C-3: Optimizing scanners
Here’s how Here’s why
1 Follow the manufacturer’s This might require using the buttons on the
instructions to access the scanner scanner or opening a Windows-based utility.
settings
3 Choose an output type This is the type of file created by the scanner.
Review questions
1 What’s the print quality of dot-matrix printers compared to?
Typewriter output
2 How are characters produced on a dot-matrix printer?
The pins are pushed forward in patterns to form letters, numbers, and other shapes. The pins
strike an inked ribbon, and the ribbon strikes the paper.
3 What paper feed mechanisms are employed by dot-matrix printers?
Tractor feed and friction feed
4 What’s a potential problem when attempting to soundproof impact printers?
Overheating due to inadequate ventilation.
5 Explain how thermal bubble technology works.
Thermal bubble technology heats the ink, which vaporizes it, creating a bubble. The bubble
protrudes out through the nozzle and sprays onto the paper. When the bubble bursts, it creates a
vacuum, which draws more ink from the cartridge into the print head, ready to create another dot.
6 Explain how piezoelectric bubble technology works.
Piezoelectric technology creates a bubble with a piezo crystal behind each nozzle. An electrical
current sent to the crystal causes it to vibrate. When it vibrates inward, it releases ink onto the
paper. When it vibrates outward, it pulls ink from the cartridge.
7 The print head for inkjet printers is usually part of the ink cartridge. True or false?
True
8 How do inkjet printers raise the DPI above what it’s physically configured to
produce?
Through software enhancements that move the print head fractionally to place dots between
existing printed dots.
9 What’s inkjet output quality compared against?
Laser printers for text and chemically created darkroom photographs for images.
10 Laser printers combine electrostatic charges, toner, and laser light to produce high-
quality images one page at time. True or false?
True
11 What’s the function of the fusing assembly in a laser printer?
It applies heat and pressure to adhere the toner permanently to the page.
12 What are some reasons for paper jams in laser printers?
Rollers are worn or not working properly, paper is too humid, or a corona wire is damaged or
worn.
13 Why might ‘garbage’ be printed on a laser printer instead of your document?
An incorrect print driver, a damaged formatter board, or use of the wrong print language.
14 Solid ink printers need the ink changed about every 500 pages. True or false?
False
15 How are shades of color produced in dye sublimation printers?
The depth of color is regulated by varying the heat applied. The transparent dyes are combined
for creating colors in a wide variety of 256 shades of each of the colors.
16 Which thermal printer uses paper with colors embedded in it?
A Direct thermal
B Thermal autochrome
C Thermal wax transfer
D Dye sub
17 Windows printers can be configured only at the printer rather than through the print
driver or software. True or false?
False
18 Inkjet printers can’t print PostScript. True or false?
False. Some can be upgraded with a PostScript upgrade kit.
19 How can adding memory and a hard drive to a printer speed up printing?
Print jobs are read from within the printer without having to communicate over the slower
communications cable connecting the printer to the computer.
20 Scanners typically are connected via serial ports. True or false?
False