Title: IS 148 A Certification, Hardware
1IS 148 A Certification, Hardware
2Printer Types
- Dot Matrix (impact)
- Ink Jet
- Dye-Sublimation
- Thermal
- Laser and LED
3Dot Matrix Printers
- Pins strikes the ribbon and transfer ink to paper
- 7 pin
- 24 pin (letter quality)
- These print heads get hot and will burn skin
- Paper moves through the printer using a tractor
feed mechanism. - Are the only style of printer that can print on
multiple part paper forms. - Still exist in point of sale equipment
4Dot Matrix
- Uses a print head containing a number of pins.
- These pins may also be called print wires.
- Pins are forced out of the print head to strike
the ribbon. - Most print heads have 9 or 24 print wires.
- Uses Tractor feed mechanism to pull the paper
through the printer.
5 Inkjet Printers
- Inkjet printers create printouts by squirting ink
out of special inkjet cartridges. - These printers use either liquid ink or a solid
wax-based ink cartridge. - Print in black and white or color.
- Inkjet printers are non-impact printers.
- Inkjet printers use friction feed to move the
paper through the printer. - Inkjet printers are sometimes called page
printers because they process a whole page before
beginning to print.
6Thermal Ink Jet Printers
- Most liquid inkjet printers and all solid inkjet
printers use a thermal process to eject ink onto
the paper. - In this process the heating element heats up,
boiling the ink. - A tiny bubble of ink forms on the end of the
print nozzle. - When the bubble pops electrically charged plates
deflect the ink onto the paper. - An inkjet print head contains between 300 and 600
nozzles, each about the diameter of a human hair. - Hewlett-Packard and Cannon use this process
7Epson Crystal Ink Jet
- Epson printers use a proprietary technology that
uses a crystal pump in the ink cartridge. - When current is passed through the crystal it
flexes and squeezes ink through the nozzles. - Size and position of the ink are controlled by
the amount of current.
8Dye-Sublimation Printers
- Sublimation To change from a solid to a vapor
and then back to a solid. - Uses rolls of heat sensitive plastic film that
contains sections of cyan, magenta and yellow
dye. - The print head moves across the film, vaporizes
the dyes. - The dyes soak into a special paper before cooling
and returning to a solid. - These printers produce a very high quality color
output.
9Thermal Printers
- There are two common types of thermal printers
- Direct thermal Uses heated pins to burn dots
into the surface of special paper. - Thermal wax transfer Works similarly to
dye-sublimation printers except it uses film
coated with colored wax. - Thermal wax printers do not require special
paper. - Do not provide as good of a quality as the
sublimation printers.
10Laser Printers
- Laser printers are built upon photocopy
technology. - Laser printers are almost identical to a photo
copy machine. - In short they work by applying different polarity
charges and voltages to a drum, toner and the
paper.
11LASER and LED Printers
- Laser printers rely on the photoconductive
properties of certain materials. - Materials that exhibit photoconductive
properties will conduct electricity when exposed
to light. - This is the same process used in copy machines.
- Laser and LED printers are the same except for
the source of light.
12LASER Printer Characteristics
- Nonimpact
- Page Printer
- Print mechanism never touches the paper
- Images the entire page before printing
- May allow duplex printing
- Resolutions upto 2400 x 2400 dpi
- Color Laser printers are available
- LASER Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission
of Radiation.
13Content of the Toner Cartridge
- Toner
- Drum
- Conditioning Roller
- Developing Roller
- The first 4 steps of the printing process use
components that are contained in the cartridge.
14Laser Printing Terms
- Photosensitive Drum
- Erase Lamp
- Primary Corona Wire Laser
- Toner
- Transfer Corona
- Fuser
15Toner
- The toner is a fine powder made up of plastic
particles bonded to iron particles. - The toner has a charge between 200 and 500
volts. - Particles of toner will be attracted to the less
negatively charged areas of the drum where the
laser wrote.
16Photo Sensitive Drum
- An aluminum drum coated with a photosensitive
compound. - Is contained in the toner cartridge
- Surface of the aluminum drum is electrically
neutral. - Should not be exposed to direct light.
- If scratched it is necessary to replace the toner
cartridge.
17Erase Lamp
- Exposes the entire surface of the photosensitive
drum to light making the photosensitive coating
electrically conductive. - The erase lamp leaves the conductive coating on
the drum electrically neutral.
18Primary Corona Wire
- Located very close to the photosensitive drum but
does not touch the drum. - Regulates the charging of the photosensitive
material on the drum. - Passes a very high static charge to the drum
surface. - The drum will receive a uniform negative charge
between 600 and a -1000 volts.
-
19Transfer Corona Wire
- Gives the paper a positive charge.
- The paper then draws the negative toner particles
to the paper. - To prevent the paper from being attracted to the
drum a static charge eliminator removes the
charge from the paper. - This wire is subject to prone build up and should
be cleaned with a special tool - Do not touch this wire with your hands.
20LASER or LED
- The laser beam is the printers writing mechanism
- Any area on the drum that is struck by the laser
beam is discharged to about a 100 volts. - Any area struck by the laser now looks positive
with respect to the drum which is at a -600 to
-1000 volts. - The laser writes a positive image to the drum as
opposed to a negative.
21Fuser
- Used to permanently attached to the paper.
- The particles are fused to the paper using two
rollers - A pressure roller
- Heated roller
- Pressure roller presses on the back of the page
while the heated roller presses on the front of
the page melting the plastic particles, toner,
into the page.
22Caution
- If a toner cartridge is dropped and toner escapes
it can cause eye damage. - Persons wearing contact lenses are at a high risk
of getting toner behind the lens and damaging the
eye. - Dont use compressed air on laser printers.
- Toner cartridges maybe considered hazardous
waste.
23The six steps of laser printing
- Clean the drum
- Charge the drum (Conditioning)
- Write the image
- Develop the image
- Transfer the image
- Fusing the image
24Steps of Laser Printing
25Step 1 Cleaning
- The drum is cleaned of any residual toner and
electrical charge.
26Step 2 Charging the drum
- Drum is conditioned by the corona wire to contain
a high negative electrical charge. - Drum is charged to between -600 and -1000 volts
27Step 3 Writing the image
- A laser beam is used to discharge the high
negative charge down to a lower charge, only in
those places where toner is to be attracted. - Each point contacted by the laser light is
reduced to 100 volts. - Remember the toner is at a -200 to -500 volts
28Step 4 Developing the image
- Toner is placed onto the drum where the charge
has been reduced. - Toner is attracted to the part of the drum with
the more positive charge
29Step 5 Transferring the image
- A strong electrical charge draws the toner off
the drum onto the paper. - A static charge eliminator removes the positive
charge from the paper. - Gravity and a weak electrical charge is all that
holds the toner to the paper at this point.
30Step 6 Fusing the image
- Heat and pressure are used to fuse the toner to
the paper. - Fusing rollers are heated to about 180 degrees C
or 356 degrees F.
- Toner is melted into the paper
- After the fusing step the process begins again
with cleaning.
31Other Laser Components
- Power Supplies
- Turning Gears
- System Boards
- Network Interface
- Ozone Filter
- Sensors and Switches
- Duplexer
- Finishers
32Power Supplies
- Laser printers typically have two power supplies
- Primary power supply that provides power to
- Motors
- System electronics
- The laser
- Transfer corona
- High-voltage power supply that provides power
only to the primary corona wire. - Always turn off a laser printer before you open
it except when installing a new toner cartridge
or replacing paper.
33Turning Gears
- Gear systems are used to
- Pick up and feed paper
- Rotate the photosensitive drum
- Move the laser light and reflecting mirror
- Agitate and distribute toner
- Move fuser rollers
- Most LASER printers have two or three gear boxes
- These boxes are easily replaced as a complete
assembly.
34System Board
- Every printer has at least one system board
containing - Main Processor Chip
- RAM
- ROM
- Some printers will have more than one electronics
board. - May be possible to add RAM
- Memory Overflow errors
35Network Interface
- Many laser printers include a network interface.
- The printers include software that allows them to
be connected directly to a network and serve as a
network printer.
36Ozone Filter
- The corona wires generate Ozone.
- This is not harmful to humans but high
concentrations will damage printer components. - Ozone filters should be replaced each time a new
toner cartridge in installed.
37Sensors and Switches
- Sensors are used to detect
- Paper jams
- Empty paper trays
- Low toner levels
- Switches are used to detect conditions like open
doors or missing covers.
38Duplexer
- These are mechanical paper feeding devices that
enable printing on both sides of the paper. - May be attached to the front or back of the
printer. - Duplexers may take the place of a paper tray.
39Finishing operations (finishers)
40Printer Connections
- Printers may be connected to a PC via
- Serial Port
- Parallel Port
- USB
- FireWire
- Network
- Hardwire
- Wireless
41Comparisons
- Serial
- Typical maximum speed 57600 bps
- Cable lengths up to 25 feet
- 9 or 25 pin
- Parallel ports
- Typical maximum speed for a standard port 150
KBps. - Cable length lt 6 feet
- 25 pin
42IEEE 1284 standard parallel port
- Attempts to deal with both the poor performance
and lack of standardization of common pc parallel
ports. - Data transfer is half duplex
- Data transfer modes
- Compatibility mode
- Nibble Mode
- Byte mode
43Compatibility / Centronics mode
- Uses typical printer cable with a Centronics plug
and a 25 pin D-shell connector - Advantage is backward compatibility
- Disadvantages are
- Data flow is only from PC to printer
- Constant attention from CPU for error checking
and handshaking - Transfer speed is limited to about 150 KBps.
-
44Nibble Mode
- Simplest way to transder data in the reverse
direction. - Provides a limited form of bidirectional
communication with any parallel port. - Uses 4 of the 5 status wires in the parallel
cable to transfer one half of an eight bit word
at t time. - A word is 8 bits so a nibble is 4 bits
- Speed is 50 KBps
45Byte Mode/Enhanced Bidirectional
- Enables reverse direction (peripheral to pc)
communications. - Requires extra hardware to handle negotiation
between pc and devices - Referred to as Enhanced Bidirectional Ports
- Two way communication at data rates of 150 KBps.
46Enhanced Parallel Port (EPP)
- Maintains backward compatibility
- Used by peripherals other than printers that
require two way communications. - Transfer rates of 500 KBps to 2 MBps.
47Extended Capabilities Port (ECP)
- Designed for high performance parallel
communications that involve moving large amounts
of data with minimum monitoring. - Examples are large printing jobs going out to a
printer or an image coming in from a scanner. - Uses a 641 compression scheme
- Many of these ports use DMA channels
- Good for handling large blocks of data via DMA
channels
48CMOS Port Check
- Cell port settings can be verified or changed in
CMOS
49Raster Graphics
- Another term for bitmapped graphics.
- Bitmapping stores an image in memory using rows
and columns of dots. - Each dot is represented by one or more bits of
data - Printers and scanners typically use raster
graphics to represent data.
50Vector Graphics
- Math formulas are used to represent the various
parameters of an image. - Vector graphics can easily change size with out
losing their original shape - Vector Graphics are used to create scalable
fonts.
51Fast Serial Printers
- USB is the most common type of printer connection
found on new printers. - FireWire connections are also now available on
many new printers. - Infrared Printers allow printing with out
hardwiring the computer to the printer. - Infrared connections are limited to line of sight
over no more than one meter. (39 Inches)
52Network Printers
- Network printers fall into two categories
- Shared Printers connected to a workstation pc
serving as a print server.shared by other pcs on
the network. - Network Printers Attached directly to the
network through an integrated NIC or dedicated
print server. - True network printers are equipped with powerful
microprocessor and large amounts of onboard RAM.
53General Print Quality Issues
- Print job never prints
- Incorrect paper size
- Garbage characters in printout
- Printer not responding
54Print Job Never Prints
- Double click on the printer icon to see the
status of all print jobs for that printer
55Print Spooler Status
- If the print job never prints check the printer
status to see what jobs are waiting to print and
their print status. - Spoolers can become corrupt due to lack of disk
space to store print jobs - Delete all print jobs and try again
56Incorrect Page Size
- A print job that comes out sized incorrectly
usually points to a user mistake in setting up
the print job. - Check page setup and reprint
- If problems continue uninstall printer drivers
and reinstall known good drivers.
57Garbage Characters in Printout
- Misaligned or garbage printout typically indicate
corrupted or incorrect printer drivers. - Verify the correct drivers
- Uninstall and reinstall printer drivers