Inkjet printers are popular with home users and small businesses. They are more affordable than other types of printers and provide excellent quality printouts. The biggest drawback is that the cost of the ink is high, resulting in a high cost per printed page.
This lesson covers the following topics:
Inkjet printer components
Inkjet technology
Maintenance
Inkjet printers are affordable, reliable, and produce high-quality prints. They are light, easily portable printers. The following table describes inkjet printer components.
Component Description | |
Ink supply system | The systems that supply the ink. The systems can be:
Inkjets use the 4-color, cyan, magenta, yellow, black (CMYK), color model which can produce 16.7 million colors. |
Printhead | The mechanism that sprays tiny dots of ink onto the paper using microscopic jets with nozzle openings (tiny holes). One or more printheads move back and forth on a carriage and belt assembly.
|
Carriage | An assembly that carries the printhead(s) and ink cartridges back and forth with precise, controlled movement during print job. |
Stabilizer bar | A sturdy metal bar that guides the carriage during a print job. |
Belt | The pulley system that helps move the carriage back and forth along stabilizer bar. The belt connects the stepper motor to the carriage. |
Stepper motor | A motor that helps move the carriage back and forth. A stepper motor advances paper rollers one print line at a time. |
Feeder | The mechanism that single-cut sheets are fed from a tray (or by hand) into printer. |
Rollers | Plastic or rubber rollers that tightly pinch the paper and move it through the printing process. The stepper motor advances the rollers. |
Duplexing assembly | An optional printer attachment that automatically turns over paper and reroutes it back through the printer for two-sided printing. |
Inkjet printers use one of the following technologies in the printhead to spray tiny ink droplets onto the paper.
Technology Description | |
Drop-on-demand (DOD) | The technology commonly used in inkjets by printer manufacturers. The two types of DOD technology are:
|
Continuous inkjet (CIJ) | Early inkjet technology that is still used commercially for marking or coding products and packages. |
Printer resolution is measured in dots per inch (DPI), the number of tiny droplets that can fit along a single inch on the page. A printer with a higher resolution means it makes smaller dots and a sharper image. Inkjet printer resolution can range from 150 dpi up to 4800 dpi (for photo-quality prints). Normal resolution is typically about 300 dpi.
Here are some common solutions if you find the printer is not working properly.
Solution Description | |
Calibrate | Calibrate the inkjet printer if the printout is degraded, misaligned, or unclear. Calibration ensures printhead and paper are properly aligned and often resolves multiple issues. |
Clean printheads | Run a printer test page to check for printhead failure. The biggest single cause of printhead failure is nozzles blocked with dried ink or dust.
For all-in-one cartridge printheads, use a printhead cleaning kit to manually clean the printhead. Follow manufacturer's guidelines. |
Replace cartridges | Observe expiration dates of printer cartridges and replace cartridges in a timely manner to avoid dried ink. |
Clear jams | Clear jams by removing jammed pieces of paper in the feeder or rollers. |
Untitled Flashcards Set
Inkjet printers are popular with home users and small businesses. They are more affordable than other types of printers and provide excellent quality printouts. The biggest drawback is that the cost of the ink is high, resulting in a high cost per printed page.
This lesson covers the following topics:
Inkjet printer components
Inkjet technology
Maintenance
Inkjet printers are affordable, reliable, and produce high-quality prints. They are light, easily portable printers. The following table describes inkjet printer components.
Component Description | |
Ink supply system | The systems that supply the ink. The systems can be:
Inkjets use the 4-color, cyan, magenta, yellow, black (CMYK), color model which can produce 16.7 million colors. |
Printhead | The mechanism that sprays tiny dots of ink onto the paper using microscopic jets with nozzle openings (tiny holes). One or more printheads move back and forth on a carriage and belt assembly.
|
Carriage | An assembly that carries the printhead(s) and ink cartridges back and forth with precise, controlled movement during print job. |
Stabilizer bar | A sturdy metal bar that guides the carriage during a print job. |
Belt | The pulley system that helps move the carriage back and forth along stabilizer bar. The belt connects the stepper motor to the carriage. |
Stepper motor | A motor that helps move the carriage back and forth. A stepper motor advances paper rollers one print line at a time. |
Feeder | The mechanism that single-cut sheets are fed from a tray (or by hand) into printer. |
Rollers | Plastic or rubber rollers that tightly pinch the paper and move it through the printing process. The stepper motor advances the rollers. |
Duplexing assembly | An optional printer attachment that automatically turns over paper and reroutes it back through the printer for two-sided printing. |
Inkjet printers use one of the following technologies in the printhead to spray tiny ink droplets onto the paper.
Technology Description | |
Drop-on-demand (DOD) | The technology commonly used in inkjets by printer manufacturers. The two types of DOD technology are:
|
Continuous inkjet (CIJ) | Early inkjet technology that is still used commercially for marking or coding products and packages. |
Printer resolution is measured in dots per inch (DPI), the number of tiny droplets that can fit along a single inch on the page. A printer with a higher resolution means it makes smaller dots and a sharper image. Inkjet printer resolution can range from 150 dpi up to 4800 dpi (for photo-quality prints). Normal resolution is typically about 300 dpi.
Here are some common solutions if you find the printer is not working properly.
Solution Description | |
Calibrate | Calibrate the inkjet printer if the printout is degraded, misaligned, or unclear. Calibration ensures printhead and paper are properly aligned and often resolves multiple issues. |
Clean printheads | Run a printer test page to check for printhead failure. The biggest single cause of printhead failure is nozzles blocked with dried ink or dust.
For all-in-one cartridge printheads, use a printhead cleaning kit to manually clean the printhead. Follow manufacturer's guidelines. |
Replace cartridges | Observe expiration dates of printer cartridges and replace cartridges in a timely manner to avoid dried ink. |
Clear jams | Clear jams by removing jammed pieces of paper in the feeder or rollers. |