How Inkjet Printers Work
Impact vs. Non-impact
Inside an Inkjet Printer
Heat vs. Vibration
Paper and Ink
Refilling Cartridges
How Laser Printers Work
Static Electricity
Drum
Fuser
The Conversation
The Language
Setting up the Page
The Laser Assembly
Writing the Page
Toner Basics
Applying Toner
Color Printers
Advantages of a Laser
What are TrueType fonts?
Ink Products
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- Thermal fax
- Printer Ribbon
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Apple M5893G/ATonerCartridge
Brother PC-202RF Thermal Ribbon
Canon F41-9921-700 (PC850) Toner Cartridge
Canon R74-5003-000 (Zantee) Toner Cartridge
Canon F41-2302-71 (A30) Toner Cartridge
Epson T407011 Black Cartridge
Epson S020062 Black Cartridge
Epson T041020 Color Cartridge
Epson S020110 Color Cartridge
Epson T034120 Photo Black Cartridge
Hewlett Packard C3900A MICR Toner Cartridge
Hewlett Packard C6578A Color Refill Kit
Hewlett Packard 51649A Color Refill Kit
Hewlett Packard C6658A Photo Color Refill Kit
Hewlett Packard 92298A Toner Cartridge
Hewlett Packard 51649A Color Cartridge
Lexmark 15M0120 Color Cartridge
Lexmark 13400HC Black Cartridge
Xerox 113R173 Toner Cartridge
Xerox 8R7660 Black Cartridge
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Heat vs. Vibration
Different types of inkjet printers form their droplets of ink in different ways. There are two main inkjet technologies currently used by printer manufacturers:

View of the nozzles on a thermal bubble inkjet print head
- Thermal bubble - Used by manufacturers such as Canon and Hewlett Packard, this method is commonly referred to as bubble jet. In a thermal inkjet printer, tiny resistors create heat, and this heat vaporizes ink to create a bubble. As the bubble expands, some of the ink is pushed out of a nozzle onto the paper. When the bubble "pops" (collapses), a vacuum is created. This pulls more ink into the print head from the cartridge. A typical bubble jet print head has 300 or 600 tiny nozzles, and all of them can fire a droplet simultaneously.
- Piezoelectric - Patented by Epson, this technology uses piezo crystals. A crystal is located at the back of the ink reservoir of each nozzle. The crystal receives a tiny electric charge that causes it to vibrate. When the crystal vibrates inward, it forces a tiny amount of ink out of the nozzle. When it vibrates out, it pulls some more ink into the reservoir to replace the ink sprayed out.
Let's walk through the printing process to see just what happens.
Click "OK" to Print
When you click on a button to print, there is a sequence of events that take place:
- The software application you are using sends the data to be printed to the printer driver.
- The driver translates the data into a format that the printer can understand and checks to see that the printer is online and available to print.
- The data is sent by the driver from the computer to the printer via the connection interface (parallel, USB, etc.).
- The printer receives the data from the computer. It stores a certain amount of data in a buffer. The buffer can range from 512 KB random access memory (RAM) to 16 MB RAM, depending on the model. Buffers are useful because they allow the computer to finish with the printing process quickly, instead of having to wait for the actual page to print. A large buffer can hold a complex document or several basic documents.
- If the printer has been idle for a period of time, it will normally go through a short clean cycle to make sure that the print head(s) are clean. Once the clean cycle is complete, the printer is ready to begin printing.
- The control circuitry activates the paper feed stepper motor. This engages the rollers, which feed a sheet of paper from the paper tray/feeder into the printer. A small trigger mechanism in the tray/feeder is depressed when there is paper in the tray or feeder. If the trigger is not depressed, the printer lights up the "Out of Paper" LED and sends an alert to the computer.
- Once the paper is fed into the printer and positioned at the start of the page, the print head stepper motor uses the belt to move the print head assembly across the page. The motor pauses for the merest fraction of a second each time that the print head sprays dots of ink on the page and then moves a tiny bit before stopping again. This stepping happens so fast that it seems like a continuous motion.
- Multiple dots are made at each stop. It sprays the CMYK colors in precise amounts to make any other color imaginable.
- At the end of each complete pass, the paper feed stepper motor advances the paper a fraction of an inch. Depending on the inkjet model, the print head is reset to the beginning side of the page, or, in most cases, simply reverses direction and begins to move back across the page as it prints.
- This process continues until the page is printed. The time it takes to print a page can vary widely from printer to printer. It will also vary based on the complexity of the page and size of any images on the page. For example, a printer may be able to print 16 pages per minute (PPM) of black text but take a couple of minutes to print one, full-color, page-sized image.
- Once the printing is complete, the print head is parked. The paper feed stepper motor spins the rollers to finish pushing the completed page into the output tray. Most printers today use inks that are very fast-drying, so that you can immediately pick up the sheet without smudging it.
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