| Inkjets and low-cost
lasers make prime printers for small-office and home users.
Laser printers offer some significant advantages for some users in the cost of operation. Higher volume users may find that laser printers produce more consistent, less expensive output and work much better in a shared printer environment. We've provided this guide to printer reviews on the net. Link to this page!!! I am constantly updating it to keep it up-to-date!
|
|
| Printer Company Hewlett Packard Worldwide Canon Worldwide Lexmark Worldwide Laser Printer Drivers HP Printers Canon Printers Lexmark Printers Reference & Softwares Directory & Forums |
Laser Printer A type of printer that utilizes a laser beam to produce an image on a drum. The light of the laser alters the electrical charge on the drum wherever it hits. The drum is then rolled through a reservoir of toner, which is picked up by the charged portions of the drum. Finally, the toner is transferred to the paper through a combination of heat and pressure. This is also the way copy machines work. Because an entire page is transmitted to
a drum before the toner is applied, laser printers are sometimes called
page printers. There are two other types of page printers that fall under
the category of laser printers even though they do not use lasers at all.
One uses an array of LEDs to expose the drum, and the other uses LCDs.
Once the drum is charged, however, they both operate like a real laser
printer. soft fonts : All laser printers come with a certain amount of RAM memory, and you can usually increase the amount of memory by adding memory boards in the printer's expansion slots. You can then copy fonts from a disk to the printer's RAM. This is called downloading fonts. A font that has been downloaded is often referred to as a soft font, to distinguish it from the hard fonts available on font cartridges. The more RAM a printer has, the more fonts that can be downloaded at one time. In addition to text, laser printers are
very adept at printing graphics. However, you need significant amounts of
memory in the printer to print high-resolution graphics. To print a
full-page graphic at 300 dpi, for example, you need at least 1 MB
(megabyte) of printer RAM. For a 600-dpi graphic, you need at least 4 MB
RAM. Most software can print using either of these PDLs. PostScript tends to be a bit more expensive, but it has some features that PCL lacks and it is the standard for desktop publishing. Some printers support both PCL and PostScript.
|