Specifications

General Information 1-17
TM-H6000/H6000P Developer’s Guide
Confidential
3. Feed a sheet of slip paper into the printer. The printer loads the paper automatically, prints
the printer settings, and then ejects the paper. (The SLIP light blinks.)
4. Remove the paper from the printer and feed another sheet of slip paper into the printer to
print characters from the character table. Continue to feed slip paper into the printer until
the self test prints the following:
***completed***
The printer is ready to receive data as soon as it completes the self test.
Running the Self Test with the Optional Endorsement Function
If your printer has the optional endorsement function, the slip paper self test is slightly different.
When you feed additional sheets of slip paper in step 4, two lines are printed on the back of the
slip by the endorsement print mechanism; then the test continues printing on the surface side of
the slip as described above.
Hexadecimal Dump
This feature allows experienced users to see exactly what data is coming to the printer. This can
be useful in finding software problems. When you turn on the hex dump function, the printer
prints all commands and other data in hexadecimal format, along with a guide section to help
you find specific commands.
To use the hex dump feature, follow these steps:
1. After you make sure the printer is off, open the paper roll cover.
2. Hold down the FEED button while you turn on the printer to print on roll paper or hold
down the RELEASE button to print on the surface side of a slip or execute the GS ( A
command.
3. Close the cover.
4. Run any software program that sends data to the printer. The printer prints “Hexadecimal
Dump” and then all the codes it receives in a two-column format. The first column contains
the hexadecimal codes and the second column gives the ASCII characters that correspond to
the codes. Part of a hexadecimal dump is shown below:
Hexadecimal Dump
To terminate hexadecimal dump,
press FEED button three times.
1B 21 00 1B 26 02 40 40 . ! . . & . @ @
1B 25 01 1B 63 34 00 1B . % . . c 4 . .
41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 A B C D E F G H
A period (.) is printed for each code that has no ASCII equivalent.