User Manual Color Printer Phaser 600
Table Of Contents
- Welcome!
- Contents
- Introduction
- Getting Set Up
- At a glance
- Setting up the printer
- What you get with your printer
- Registering your printer
- Unpacking instructions
- Moving the printer to its operating location
- Removing adhesive tape and cable tie
- Removing the transit restraint
- Removing the shipping blocks
- Attaching the ink loader
- Loading the ink
- Attaching the output bin
- Attaching the Quick Reference Guide
- Connecting the printer
- Selecting a language for the front panel
- Installing the starter paper roll
- Software installation
- PC/Windows software
- Which Windows driver to install?
- Custom Install or Easy Install?
- Setting up the drivers for Windows95 (cont'd.)
- Setting up the drivers for Windows 3.1 (cont'd.)
- Setting up a PostScript driver for Windows NT 3.5 ...
- Setting up the printer on a network for Windows NT...
- Setting up a PostScript driver for Windows NT 4.0 ...
- Setting up the printer on a network for Windows NT...
- Macintosh software
- Workstation software
- Printing Basics
- Printing overview
- Printing from a PC
- Print features quick reference: Windows printer dr...
- Using the Microsoft PostScript driver with Windows...
- Using the AdobePS 4 driver with Windows 95
- Using the Tektronix printer driver for Windows 3.1...
- Using the Adobe PostScript driver for Windows 3.1
- Using the Windows NT 3.5 and 3.51 PostScript drive...
- Using the Windows NT 4.0 PostScript driver
- Printing from a Macintosh
- Printing from a workstation
- Printing from specific applications
- Selecting print features
- All about media
- Image manipulation
- Printer languages: PostScript, HP-GL
- Fonts
- Printing: Beyond the Basics
- Working with color
- Color corrections — making the best selection
- Printing and using the color sampler charts
- Special printing features
- Phaser Copystation
- Laminating your Phaser600 prints
- Printing the Color Sampler Charts
- Color Matching
- Using PANTONE® Color Files
- Using the PhaserPrint™ Plug-in for Photoshop
- Overview
- Compatibility
- Installing the PhaserPrint plug-in for Photoshop
- Using the plug-in
- Starting the PhaserPrint plug-in
- Selecting options in the PhaserPrint dialog box
- Number of copies
- Print using (Macintosh)
- Print using (Windows)
- Printer model
- Media size
- Color correction
- Quality
- Fusing
- Advance media
- Cut media
- Page rotation
- Rendering intent
- Compress image data
- Fast preview
- Manual feed
- Print preview
- Mirror print
- Center page
- No margins
- Image smoothing
- Color control strip
- Stylized representation of the page
- Scaling an image
- Landscape orientation
- Center images
- Replicate images
- Image size
- Image separation
- Number of images
- Image layout
- Media size
- Show color preview of image
- Using the Phaser600 GX Driver
- System requirements
- Installing the Phaser 600 GX printer driver
- Creating a desktop printer
- Setting up unique desktop printers
- Printing with a desktop printer
- Setting up a shared printer
- Printing from QuickDraw GX applications
- Printing from non-QuickDraw GX applications
- Viewing printer status
- Disabling QuickDraw GX
- Printing From DOS
- Printing from UNIX and VMS Workstations
- Using Printer Utilities
- Installing the utility files
- Downloading files to the printer
- Changing the printer's name
- Resetting the printer
- Using the color rendering intents
- Enabling and disabling job pipelining
- Modifying the Advance Media default
- Setting page offset
- Adding Control-D characters to PC files
- Configuring a printer’s serial port
- Other utilities
- Using SCSI Hard Disks
- Using the Printer’s Parallel Port
- Using Different Printer Language Modes
- Caring for Your Printer
- Troubleshooting
- If you need help
- Using the automated fax systems
- Front panel messages
- Symptoms and solutions
- Printing hints
- Improving print speed
- PostScript printing errors
- Printed colors are not what you expected
- Selecting page sizes in Windows applications
- Fonts printing incorrectly from Windows
- Sharing the printer on a network
- Media hints and tips
- Clearing a media jam
- Clearing an ink jam
- Using the Front Panel
- Ordering Information
- Regulatory Information
- Index

IMPROVING PRINT SPEED
623
Of these elements, only the time contributed by the printer’s paper-marking speed
(the time it takes the printer to put the ink on the paper once it has received the
processed image) is predictable; the others can vary greatly depending on your
system configuration and the type of image you are printing. However, the printer
printer’s PostScript interpreter combines very fast image processing and
communication with sophisticated memory management to keep the total print time
to a minimum.
The printer’s optimum image processing throughput via a dedicated Ethernet
connection is about 200 Kbytes per second. Actual throughput will generally be
somewhat slower than this, depending on network traffic, image complexity, color
correction, and memory configuration. For details on the printer’s paper-marking
speed, see Specifi
cations.