CompTIA A_ Certification All-In-One Exam Guide, Seventh Edition - Michael Meyers [380]
Figure 22-3 Typical inkjet printer
Figure 22-4 Inside an inkjet printer
The ink is stored in special small containers called ink cartridges. Older inkjet printers had two cartridges: one for black ink and another for colored ink. The color cartridge had separate compartments for cyan (blue), magenta (red), and yellow ink, to print colors by using a method known as CMYK (you’ll read more about CMYK later in this chapter). If your color cartridge ran out of one of the colors, you had to purchase a whole new color cartridge or deal with a messy refill kit.
Figure 22-5 Detail of the inkjet printhead
Printer manufacturers began to separate the ink colors into three separate cartridges so that printers came with four cartridges: one for each color and a fourth for black (Figure 22-6). This not only was more cost-effective for the user, but it also resulted in higher quality printouts. Today you can find color inkjet printers with six, eight, or more color cartridges. In addition to the basic CMYK inks, the other cartridges provide for green, blue, gray, light cyan, dark cyan, and more. Typically, the more ink cartridges a printer uses, the higher the quality of the printed image—and the higher the cost of the printer.
Figure 22-6 Inkjet ink cartridges
The two key features of an inkjet printer are the print resolution—that is, the density of ink, which affects print quality—and the print speed. Resolution is measured in dots per inch (dpi); higher numbers mean that the ink dots on the page are closer together, so your printed documents will look better. Resolution is most important when you’re printing complex images such as full-color photos, or when you’re printing for duplication and you care that your printouts look good. Print speed is measured in pages per minute (ppm), and this specification is normally indicated right on the printer’s box. Most printers have one (faster) speed for monochrome printing—that is, using only black ink—and another for full-color printing.
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EXAM TIP Print resolution is measured in dots per inch (dpi) and print speed is measured in pages per minute (ppm).
Another feature of inkjet printers is that they can support a staggering array of print media. Using an inkjet printer, you can print on a variety of matte or glossy photo papers, iron-on transfers, and other specialty media; some printers can print directly onto specially coated optical discs, or even fabric. Imagine running a T-shirt through your printer with your own custom slogan (how about “I’m CompTIA A+ Certified!”). The inks have improved over the years, too, now delivering better quality and longevity than ever. Where older inks would smudge if the paper got wet or start to fade after a short time, modern inks are smudge proof and of archival quality—for example, some inks by Epson are projected to last up to 200 years.
Dye-Sublimation Printers
The term sublimation means to cause something to change from a solid form into a vapor and then back into a solid. This is exactly the process behind dye-sublimation printing, sometimes called thermal dye transfer printing. Dye-sublimation printers are used mainly for photo printing, high-end desktop publishing, medical and scientific imaging, and other applications for which fine detail and rich color are more important than cost and speed. Smaller, specialized printers called snapshot printers use dye-sublimation specifically for printing photos at a reduced cost compared to their full-sized counterparts.
The dye-sublimation printing technique is an example of the so-called CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, black) method of color printing. It uses a roll of heat-sensitive plastic film embedded with page-sized sections of cyan (blue), magenta (red), and yellow dye; many also have