Printing a Job |
3/10/03
5-45
operator to determine the optimum heater duty cycle to ensure adequate drying for any
particular print job.
Move through the displayed digits using the
ACCEPT
key. The selected digit has an
underline indicating it can be increased or decreased using the + or - keys. Only the first
two digits can be changed. The first digit can only be a 1 or a 0 — pressing accept when
the 1 is displayed automatically set the value to 100%. To set a value less than 100%,
change the first digit to 0, press
ACCEPT
and then change the second digit using the +
or - keys. When you have set the second digit, press
ACCEPT
to go the third. After
setting it press
ACCEPT
to the “Place media on table” menu, or to the Change Offsets
selection menu if this was enabled.
Change Offsets
The following screen allows you to change first the horizontal and then the vertical
offsets.
Use the
ACCEPT
key to move through the displayed digits. The selected digit has an
underline indicating it can be increased or decreased using the + or - keys. When the digit
you want to use is displayed, press
ACCEPT
and the underline moves to the next digit.
When you are at the last digit, pressing
ACCEPT
advances to the Place Media display.
Note:
There is an important distinction between drying and curing. Drying involves
providing sufficient heat to the media so that the ink is not affected by
subsequent passes of the print heads. It is determined by the heater duty
cycle. Curing is the process that ensures the media, with its printed image,
can be safely handled without smearing or otherwise degrading print quality.
It is determined by time and various environmental conditions.
Enter new heat setting:
100%
Print Mode
speed 1x
Enter new H offset: (-6 to 2783mm)
H: +04.00mm, V: +0755mm
Summary of Contents for Arizona T220
Page 1: ...Oc Arizona T220 User Guide Revision A March 2003...
Page 2: ...Oc Display Graphics Systems 2002 All Rights Reserved...
Page 6: ...Oc iv 3010100686...
Page 10: ...Oc vi 3010100686 A...
Page 32: ...Oc Media 3 22 3010100686 A...
Page 37: ...Menu Structure 3 10 03 4 27 Figure 14 Maintenance Menu Tree...