HP Hewlett Packard DesignJet 510PS User Manual

Introduction  
This User’s Reference Guide explains how to use your HP Designjet 510 or 510ps printer. The contents of this  
guide are valid for both the HP Designjet 510 and the HP Designjet 510ps except where otherwise indicated.  
This chapter contains the following topics:  
Introducing the documentation  
Introduces your printer’s documentation.  
Introducing your printer  
Contains a brief overview of the printer. It contains information about the printer’s features and what is  
included with the printer.  
Front view of printer  
Contains a view of the front of the printer showing the location of the printer’s consumable items.  
Printer connections  
Shows all the connections to the printer: power, parallel interface, USB and optional network interface.  
Introducing your printer  
Your printer’s main features  
A general overview of the major features of your printer.  
HP ink supplies  
A description of the HP ink supplies required for your printer.  
Print resolution  
Specifications of the print resolution for your printer.  
Paper  
A description of the different types of paper available for your printer.  
User interface  
A description of the printer’s user interface.  
Memory  
Details of internal memory and memory options available with your printer.  
Drivers  
Details of the drivers delivered with your printer.  
 
Your printer’s main features  
The HP Designjet 510 printer is designed for individuals or small work-groups in architecture, engineering and  
construction (AEC), and mechanical CAD design.  
The HP Designjet 510ps printer is designed for individuals or small work-groups in advertising agencies, in-house  
graphic departments that specialize in packaging, point-of-sale material and events, as well as other graphics  
applications.  
For the complete printing solution, HP also offers a wide range of paper including HP Satin Poster Paper (ideal for  
graphic artists) and HP High-Gloss Photo Paper for high-quality images with an ultra-smooth glossy finish. And  
with the HP Complementary Media Program, HP provides you with a wide spectrum of choice and flexibility in  
paper selection.  
The printer comes in two sizes: A0+/E+ size (42 in/1066.8 mm) and D/A1 size (24 in/609.6 mm) models. Both  
models have roll-feed capabilities and come with an HP-GL/2 Accessory Card. The A0+/E+ size model also  
includes legs and a paper bin.  
Ultimate photo print quality and excellent line quality: The printer delivers excellent line quality with a true  
resolution of 1200×600 dpi, using HP's color layering technology, which deposits inks of multiple colors in a  
single drop on coated paper. This excellent line quality is achieved due to the fact that each half-inch/12.7mm  
printhead contains 304 nozzles, producing miniscule 18-picoliter black pigmented ink drops and four picoliter  
color dye-based drops, that are idea for engineering and architectural applications. The printer also delivers  
ultimate photo quality for renders and photographs, providing continuous tones and smooth transitions.  
Color accuracy, consistency and management: The HP Designjet 510ps printer includes Adobe®  
PostScript® 3™ software Raster Image Processor (RIP) which imitates the color behavior of offset printing  
presses and supports emulation standards DIC, EuroScale, SWOP and TOYO. In addition, the HP Designjet  
510ps printer delivers consistent color accuracy and supports ColorSync 3.0 for Mac OS users and  
PANTONE tables for Windows users. And, by using the closed-loop color calibration system, the HP  
Designjet 510ps printer prints repeatable colors, independent of printhead usage, ambient temperature,  
humidity or ink levels.  
More…  
 
Unattendedness: The printer includes a modular ink delivery system, with up to 69-cc cartridge capacity, and  
long-life printheads which last, on average, through ten black ink cartridges and six color ink cartridges,  
depending on use. This modular system allows you to replace individual ink supplies separately, as needed,  
and also provides automatic alignment and cutting and stacking of finished prints in the paper bin, enabling  
continuous and unattended printing. In addition, the printer includes smart chips that are embedded into each  
individual printhead and ink cartridge that alert you when it is time to replace the printhead and continuously  
monitor ink levels.  
Ease-of-use: The printer is a true out-of the box solution and provides you with everything you need to install  
and use the printer. It includes a control/display panel for simple navigation and straightforward paper loading.  
The HP Designjet 510ps printer also includes easy-to-install RIP software.  
HP Premium Printing Material: The A0+/E+ size and D/A1 size printers accept a wide range of roll and  
sheet paper from 24 in/609.6 mm (D/A1 size) to 42 in/1066.8 mm (A0+/E+ size) wide including HP Satin  
Poster Paper, HP High-Gloss Photo Paper and HP Heavyweight Coated Paper.  
Complementary Media Program (CMP): The CMP helps you to grow their business by referencing third-  
party printing material choices to ensure maximum HP Designjet printer flexibility and printing solutions.  
 
HP ink supplies  
HP ink supplies for your printer contain two components: printheads and ink cartridges. The printer uses the  
following HP ink supplies:  
Black ink cartridges are HP No 82 supplies.  
Cyan, magenta and yellow cartridges are HP No 82 supplies. They are available in 28 and 69 ml sizes.  
All printheads are HP No 11 supplies.  
Each 600-dpi thermal inkjet printhead applies thousands of ink droplets onto the paper. The printer automatically  
refills the printhead as it prints, enabling continuous uninterrupted printing. The ink is supplied to each printhead  
from a separate large-capacity ink cartridge.  
There is more information available in a pamphlet which comes with the printheads and in Print times for a  
selected print quality.  
             
Print resolution  
Your printer provides two different print modes that change the print resolutions of each of the print quality modes.  
These different print modes are optimized for: Line Drawings/Text or Images.  
You can then choose between three levels of print quality for each of the print modes: Best, Normal or Fast, from  
your software or from the printer's front panel.  
With the Best mode selected, you have an additional selection available to provide maximum detail for your  
printed image by increasing the resolution of your job above the default resolution.  
Print quality setting  
Optimized for Line Drawing/Text  
Resolution in dpi  
Optimized for Images  
Resolution in dpi  
Render  
300×300  
600×600  
600×600  
600×600  
Halftone  
600×300  
600×600  
600×600  
1200×600  
Render  
150×150  
300×300  
600×600  
600×600  
Halftone  
Fast  
600×300  
600×600  
Normal  
Best (default)  
Best (maximum detail)  
600×600  
2400×1200a  
a. Glossy photo paper only  
Use Fast to get draft copies of your prints at maximum throughput. Normal is optimized so that you get the best  
line quality with the fastest throughput. Select Best if you want to get the best quality for images and renderings.  
   
Paper  
You can print on roll or sheet paper up to 42 in (1066.8 mm) wide with the A0+/E+ size printer and up to 24 in  
(609.6 mm) with the D/A1 size printer.  
For a list of the supported paper types, see Physical characteristics of paper types.  
   
User interface  
The printer’s front panel includes an easy-to-use interface with a display, giving you access to a comprehensive  
set of printer functions.  
See Navigating the menu system for a short tutorial to teach you how to navigate through the menus and for a  
description of internal prints.  
 
Memory  
The printer comes with 160 MB of internal Random Access Memory (RAM). Additional memory can be added to  
the HP-GL/2 Accessory card that came with the printer. You can add 256 MB (part number CH654A) of memory  
for large-file processing and improved printing.  
   
Drivers  
Always use the right driver (configured correctly) for the combination of your application software and your printer  
to ensure that your printer prints exactly what you were expecting in terms of: size, position, orientation, color and  
quality.  
NOTE:  
Many software applications include their own drivers.  
Your printer comes supplied with:  
Windows drivers  
Mac OS X drivers  
RIP software, for the HP Designjet 510ps only  
   
Front view of printer  
Ink cartridge  
Printhead  
Power  
Front panel  
switch/indicator  
 
Printer connections  
Your printer can be connected directly to your  
computer via the traditional parallel interface or  
through the Universal Serial Bus (USB) port.  
Connection  
For Local Area Network (LAN) connection your  
printer can be fitted with an optional HP Jetdirect  
Print Server Fast Ethernet 10/100 base TX network  
interface card.  
See the Assembly and Set-up Poster for information  
on connecting your printer to a computer or network.  
Power socket  
Parallel port connection  
USB connection  
       
Paper and ink  
Your printer can use a variety of papers. The recommended papers are designed for use with your printer and  
your printer’s ink system to give you the best results.  
This chapter contains the following topics:  
Paper choice explains how to choose the correct paper type. Choosing the correct paper type for your needs  
is an essential step in ensuring good print quality.  
Roll paper details the procedures used for loading and unloading your roll paper.  
Sheet paper details the procedures used for loading and unloading your sheet paper.  
Ink system gives you an overview of the printer’s ink system, with some warnings and precautions for its  
optimum use.  
Ink cartridges details the procedures used for: obtaining information, interpreting errors, checking levels and  
replacing ink cartridges.  
Printheads details the procedures used for: obtaining information, interpreting errors, replacing printheads  
and aligning printheads.  
Paper choice  
Choosing paper  
Your printer supports several types of paper. Choosing the best paper type for your needs is an essential  
step in ensuring good print quality. These topics help you to select the best paper for your particular printing  
task.  
Paper types  
Detailed information concerning the different types of paper available for your printer. This includes  
information on: the types of paper supported, their physical characteristics, quality selection, handling and  
how to obtain information.  
Print times for a selected print quality  
Typical printing times for color and black lines and images on different types of paper.  
Printable area  
The dimensions of the printable areas for all paper types.  
 
Choosing paper  
For best printing results, use only genuine Hewlett-Packard papers, whose reliability and performance have been  
developed and thoroughly tested. All Hewlett-Packard printing components (printer, ink system and paper) have been  
designed to work together to give trouble-free performance and optimal print quality. For detailed information on  
Hewlett-Packard paper, see Paper types.  
You should also take note of some important points about paper:  
This printer supports many types of paper. However, the quality of some images may be reduced if you do not  
use the correct paper for your application. For example, images with large regions of intense color, where  
many ink drops are needed to fully saturate the color, will not print well on HP Bright White InkJet Paper. On  
HP Coated paper, the same images might cause the paper to wrinkle and then come into contact with the  
printheads, smearing your print and risking damage to the printhead. See Combinations of paper type and  
print quality selection.  
Whenever you load a roll or a sheet, the printer’s front-panel display prompts you to specify the paper type  
you are loading. It is absolutely essential to specify this correctly for good print quality. The Physical  
characteristics of paper types table gives you all the information you need. If paper is already loaded and you  
are unsure which paper type was specified, go to the Paper Menu and press Enter; see Obtaining roll or sheet  
paper information.  
Make sure the appropriate print-quality setting (Best, Normal or Fast) is selected. You can set the print  
quality either from your software or from the printer’s front panel (software driver settings override any print-  
quality settings made on the front panel). The combination of paper type and print-quality settings tells the  
printer how to place the ink on the paper—for example, the ink density, dithering method, and number of  
passes of the printheads. For more details, see Combinations of paper type and print quality selection.  
Included with this printer is the Hewlett-Packard Printing Materials catalog which gives ordering details for  
Hewlett-Packard paper supplies. To get the latest version of this document, contact your local Hewlett-  
Packard Sales and Support office.  
     
Paper types  
The following topics address the various types of paper available, their particular use and how to obtain  
information about them.  
Physical characteristics of paper types  
Details the physical characteristics of each of the supported paper types.  
Combinations of paper type and print quality selection  
Gives guidelines for selecting the correct Print Quality selection for the type of paper you are using.  
Handling your paper  
Explains the precautions to take when handling paper.  
Obtaining roll or sheet paper information  
   
Physical characteristics of paper types  
The following table lists the physical characteristics and selection numbers of supported HP Premium Printing  
Material. Always print on the image side with the special coating; the image side faces outwards on roll products  
from Hewlett-Packard. There are frequent changes to the list of supported papers; you can find the updated list at  
http://www.hp.com/go/graphic-arts/.  
Key to availability:  
(a) indicates papers available in Asia, excluding Japan.  
(e) indicates papers available in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.  
(j) indicates papers available in Japan.  
(l) indicates papers available in Latin America.  
(n) indicates papers available in North America.  
(*) indicates that the paper is supported for line drawings only.  
If the part number is not followed by parentheses, the paper is available in all regions.  
Physical paper characteristics  
18 in  
458 mm  
24 in  
610 mm  
36 in  
914 mm  
42 in  
1067 mm  
HP Bond and Coated Paper  
Front panel name  
HP Heavyweight Coated Paper  
Heavy Coated Paper  
C6029C (aejn) C6030C  
Q1412A (aejn) Q1413A  
C6569C  
35 lb. (131 g/m²) – 100 ft (30.5 m)  
HP Universal Heavyweight Coated Paper  
32 lb. (120 g/m²) – 100 ft (30.5 m)  
HP Coated Paper  
Heavy Coated Paper  
Coated Paper  
Q1414A (aejn)  
C6567B  
C6019B  
C6020B  
26 lb. (90 g/m²) – 150 ft (45.7 m)  
HP Inkjet Coated Paper  
Coated Paper  
Q7897A (ejn)  
26 lb. (90 g/m²) – 150 ft (45.7 m) roll / 100 sheets  
HP Universal Coated Paper  
Coated Paper  
Q1404A (aejn) Q1405A (aejn) Q1406A  
26 lb. (95 g/m²) – 150 ft (45.7 m)  
HP Bright White Inkjet Paper  
Bright White Inkjet Paper  
C1860A (ln)  
C1861A (ln)  
24 lb. (90 g/m²) – 150 ft (45.7 m)  
C6035A (aej)  
C6036A (aej)  
   
HP Universal Bond Paper  
Plain Paper  
Q1396A  
Q1397A  
Q1398A  
21 lb. (80 g/m²) – 150 ft (45.7 m)  
HP Fluorescent Yellow Coloured Paper  
100 g/m² – 150 ft (45.7 m)  
Coated Paper  
Coated Paper  
Q1757A (e)  
Q1760A (en)  
HP Yellow Coloured Paper  
92 g/m² – 150 ft (45.7 m)  
18 in  
458 mm  
24 in  
610 mm  
36 in  
914 mm  
42 in  
1067 mm  
HP Technical Paper  
Front panel name  
HP Natural Tracing Paper  
90 g/m² – 150 ft (45.7 m)  
HP Translucent Bond Paper  
67 g/m² – 150 ft (45.7 m)  
HP Vellum Paper  
Natural Tracing Paper  
C3869A (*)  
C3868A (*)  
Translucent Bond  
Vellum  
C3860A (ajn*) C3859A (ln*)  
C3862 (n)  
C3861A (ln)  
75 g/m² – 150 ft (45.7 m)  
18 in  
458 mm  
24 in  
610 mm  
36 in  
914 mm  
42 in  
1067 mm  
HP Film (Technical and Graphic)  
Front panel name  
HP Clear Film  
Clear Film  
C3876A (aejn) C3875A  
51642A (aejn) 51642B  
174 g/m² – 75 ft (22.9 m)  
HP Matte Film  
Matte Film  
Matte Film  
160 g/m² – 125 ft (38.1 m)  
HP White Matte Polyester Film  
167 g/m² – 50 ft (15.2 m)  
Q1736A (aen)  
18 in  
458 mm  
24 in  
610 mm  
36 in  
914 mm  
42 in  
1067 mm  
HP Photographic Paper  
Front panel name  
HP High-gloss CP Photo Paper  
179 g/m² – 100 ft (30.5 m)  
High-Gloss Photo  
C6025A (ln)  
C6033A (aj)  
C6026A (ln)  
C6034A (aej)  
C6024A (ln)  
C6032A (aej)  
Q6575A  
C6565A (ln)  
C6573A (e)  
HP Semi-gloss CP Photo Paper  
179 g/m² – 100 ft (30.5 m)  
High-Gloss Photo  
High-Gloss Photo  
High-Gloss Photo  
HP Universal Instant-dry Gloss Photo Paper  
190 g/m² – 100 ft (30.5 m)  
Q6574A  
Q6579A  
Q6576A  
Q6581A  
HP Universal Instant-dry Semi-gloss Photo Paper  
190 g/m² – 100 ft (30.5 m)  
Q6580A  
HP Universal High-gloss Photo Paper  
190 g/m² – 100 ft (30.5 m)  
High-Gloss Photo  
High-Gloss Photo  
Q1426A (aejn) Q1427A (aejn)  
C3860A (ajn*) C3859A (ln*)  
HP Universal Semi-gloss Photo Paper  
190 g/m² – 100 ft (30.5 m)  
18 in  
458 mm  
24 in  
610 mm  
36 in  
914 mm  
42 in  
1067 mm  
HP Proofing Paper  
Front panel name  
HP Professional Semi-gloss Contract Proofing  
Paper  
High-Gloss Photo  
Q8049A (en)  
Q7971A (en)  
Q8909A (en)  
Q8910A (en)  
235 g/m² – 100 ft (30.5 m) / 13 × 19 in, 50 sheets  
HP Matte Proofing Paper  
Heavy Coated Paper  
High-Gloss Photo  
Q7896A (ejn)  
CG462A (e)  
Q1968A (aejn)  
CG463A (e)  
146 g/m² – 100 ft (30.5 m) / 100 sheets  
HP Premium Semi-gloss Proofing Paper  
240 g/m² – 100 ft (30.5 m) / 13 × 19 in, 50 sheets  
CG490A (e)  
18 in  
458 mm  
24 in  
610 mm  
36 in  
914 mm  
42 in  
1067 mm  
HP Self-adhesive Material  
Front panel name  
HP Two-view Cling Film  
Clear Film  
Q1914A (aen) Q1915A (aen)  
Q1733A (ejn)  
240 g/m² – 75 ft (22.9 m)  
HP Self-adhesive Indoor Paper  
170 g/m² – 75 ft (22.9 m)  
Heavy Coated Paper  
Matte Film  
HP Matte Adhesive-back Polypropylene  
225 g/m² – 100 ft (30.5 m)  
HP Colorfast Adhesive Vinyl  
328 g/m² – 40 ft (12.2 m)  
Q1908A (aen)  
Matte Film  
C6775A  
18 in  
458 mm  
24 in  
610 mm  
36 in  
914 mm  
42 in  
1067 mm  
HP Banner and Sign Material  
Front panel name  
HP Durable Display Film  
205 g/m² – 50 ft (15.2 m)  
HP Instant-dry Gloss Indoor Banner  
195 g/m² – 50 ft (15.2 m)  
HP Opaque Scrim  
Matte Film  
Q6620A (en)  
Q5482A  
Matte Film  
Matte Film  
Q5483A  
Q8675A  
Q1898B (aen) Q1899B (aen)  
460 g/m² – 50 ft (15.2 m)  
HP Matte Polypropylene  
130 g/m² – 75 ft (22.9 m)  
HP Banners with Tyvek®  
140 g/m² – 50 ft (15.2 m)  
HP Outdoor Paper  
Matte Film  
Q1903A (aen) Q1904A (aen)  
C6798A (ajn)  
Heavy Coated Paper  
Heavy Coated Paper  
Heavy Coated Paper  
Q1730A (en)  
145 g/m² – 100 ft (30.5 m)  
HP Blue Back Outdoor Billboard Paper  
140 g/m² – 100 ft (30.5 m)  
C7949A (en)  
18 in  
458 mm  
24 in  
610 mm  
36 in  
914 mm  
42 in  
1067 mm  
HP Fine Art Printing Material  
Front panel name  
HP Canvas Paper  
Canvas  
Q1724A (aen)  
180 g/m² – 35 ft (10.7 m)  
A2: 16.54 in A1: 23.39 in A0: 33.11 in  
Metric sizes  
Front panel name  
420 mm  
594 mm  
841 mm  
HP Natural Tracing Paper  
90 g/m² – 150 ft (45.7 m)  
HP Coated Paper  
Natural Tracing Paper  
Q1440A (j)  
Q1439A (j)  
Q1438A (j)  
Coated Paper  
Q1443A (j)  
Q1442A (ej)  
Q1445A (ej)  
Q8003A (aj)  
Q6596A (e)  
Q1441A (ej)  
Q1444A (ej)  
26 lb. (90 g/m²) – 150 ft (45.7 m)  
HP Bright White Inkjet Paper  
24 lb. (90 g/m²) – 150 ft (45.7 m)  
HP Universal Bond Paper  
21 lb. (80 g/m²) – 150 ft (45.7 m)  
HP Yellow Coloured Paper  
92 g/m² – 295.3 ft (90 m)  
Bright White Inkjet Paper Q1446A (j)  
Plain Paper  
Coated Paper  
Additional information about paper types  
The following HP Premium Printing Material can be used to perform the printhead alignment, see Printhead  
alignment.  
HP Bright White Inkjet Paper (Bond)  
HP Coated Paper  
HP Heavyweight Coated Paper  
HP High-Gloss Photo Paper  
HP Satin Poster Paper  
You can also use Plain Paper in addition to the above.  
To order any of the HP Premium Printing Material, see the pamphlet Hewlett-Packard Printing Materials.  
From time to time, new paper types may become available. For up-to-date information, please contact your  
Hewlett-Packard dealer, local Hewlett-Packard Sales and Support Office or the Designjet Online Web site.  
 
Combinations of paper type and print quality selection  
Use the following tables, given by application, to guide you when choosing your paper and selecting the print  
quality setting (Fast, Normal, Best).  
CAD drawings—mono  
CAD drawings and GIS—color (lines and low density)  
CAD rendering, GIS and images—color and CAD (high ink density).  
As a general guide:  
Fast is best for draft copies of your prints at maximum throughput.  
Normal is optimized so that you get the best line quality with the fastest throughput.  
Best is for when you want to get the best quality for images and renderings.  
   
CAD drawings—mono  
The following table lists the recommended print quality settings for specific usage with typical paper.  
Supported paper types—mono  
Usage  
Drafts  
Typical paper selection  
Recommended print quality setting  
Plain Paper  
Fast or normal  
Bright Inkjet Paper  
Natural Tracing Paper  
Translucent Bond  
Final versions Plain Paper  
Bright Inkjet Paper  
Normal or Best  
Natural Tracing Paper  
Translucent Bond  
Coated Paper  
Heavy Coated Paper  
Matte Film  
Clear Film  
Archives  
Diazo  
Vellum  
Matte Film  
Clear Film  
Best  
Translucent Bond  
Natural Tracing Paper  
Vellum  
Normal or Best  
Matte Film  
 
CAD drawings and GIScolor (lines and low density)  
The following table lists the recommended print quality settings for specific usage with typical paper.  
Supported paper types—color  
Usage  
Drafts  
Typical paper selection  
Recommended print quality setting  
Plain Paper  
Fast or Normal  
Bright Inkjet Paper  
Natural Tracing Paper  
Translucent Bond  
Final versions  
Plain Paper  
Normal or Best  
Bright Inkjet Paper  
Coated paper  
Heavy Coated Paper  
Matte Film  
Clear Film  
Archives  
Matte Film  
Clear Film  
Best  
Transparencies Clear Film  
Normal or Best  
 
CAD rendering, GIS and imagescolor and CAD (high ink density)  
The following table lists the recommended print quality settings for specific usage with typical paper.  
Supported paper types—color and CAD  
Usage  
Typical paper selection  
Recommended print quality setting  
Matte Paper  
Glossy  
Heavy Coated Paper  
Normal or Best  
Normal or Best  
Best  
High Gloss Photo Paper  
Transparencies Clear Film  
 
Handling your paper  
Take the following precautions when handling paper:  
Handle film and glossy paper by the edges or wear cotton gloves. Skin oils can interact with the ink and cause  
it to smear.  
Although the ink systems supplied with this printer have good light fastness, colors will eventually fade or  
change if exposed to sunlight over a long period of time.  
Rewrap partially used rolls if they are not being used, and do not stack rolls.  
Always keep unused rolls in their plastic wrappings to prevent discoloration.  
   
Obtaining roll or sheet paper information  
If roll or sheet paper is loaded, the type of paper is displayed when you select the Paper menu on the front panel.  
Bright White Inkjet Paper  
Plain Paper  
Vellum  
Natural Tracing Paper  
Translucent Bond  
Clear Film  
Matte Film  
Coated Paper  
Heavy Coated Paper  
High-Gloss Photo  
Canvas  
Roll or Sheet  
Poster Paper  
If there is no paper loaded, the front-panel display shows the following message and you will need to load roll or  
sheet paper.  
                           
Print times for a selected print quality  
The following table lists some typical printing times for D/A1 size paper.  
Typical printing times  
Time (in seconds)  
Color lines  
on Coated  
Paper  
Images  
on Coated  
Paper  
Images  
on Glossy  
Paper  
Print quality  
Mono lines  
on Bond  
Fast  
69  
96  
234  
550  
940  
480  
690  
990  
Normal  
Best  
216  
360  
216  
285  
     
Printable area  
The following topics detail the printable areas for each of the different paper size systems:  
ANSI paper  
The American National Standards Institute imperial paper sizing system.  
Architectural paper  
The Architectural paper sizing system.  
ISO paper  
The International Standards Organization metric paper sizing system, which is the size system commonly  
used in Europe.  
         
ANSI paper  
The following table lists the printable area for the ANSI paper size system. The left and right margins are 0.2 in  
(5 mm) and the leading and trailing edge margins are 0.7 in (17 mm).  
Where: Printable area = Paper Size – Margins  
Printable areas for ANSI paper  
Printable area (width × height) by image orientation  
Orientationof  
Inches  
Millimeters  
Paper  
size  
paper in  
printer  
Landscape  
Portrait  
Landscape  
Portrait  
Width Height Width Height Width Height Width Height  
A
Portrait  
9.7  
7.2  
8.1  
8.1  
9.7  
7.2  
245  
182  
398  
245  
525  
398  
830  
525  
206  
269  
269  
422  
422  
549  
549  
854  
206  
269  
269  
422  
422  
549  
549  
854  
854  
245  
182  
398  
245  
525  
398  
830  
525  
1084  
Landscape  
Portrait  
10.6  
10.6  
16.6  
16.6  
21.6  
21.6  
33.6  
10.6  
10.6  
16.6  
16.6  
21.6  
21.6  
33.6  
33.6  
B
C
D
E
15.7  
9.7  
15.7  
9.7  
Landscape  
Portrait  
20.7  
15.7  
32.7  
20.7  
20.7  
15.7  
32.7  
20.7  
42.7  
Landscape  
Portrait  
Landscape  
Portrait  
N/A  
N/A  
Landscape  
32.7  
43.6  
N/A  
830  
1108  
N/A  
Indicates this printable area is available only if you are using the A0+/E+ size format  
printer  
 
Architectural paper  
The following table lists the printable area for the Architectural paper size system.  
The left and right margins are 0.2 in (5 mm) and the leading and trailing edge margins are 0.7 in (17 mm).  
Where: Printable area = Paper Size – Margins .  
Printable areas for Architectural paper  
Printable area (width × height) by image orientation  
Orientationof  
Inches  
Millimeters  
Paper  
size  
paper in  
printer  
Landscape  
Portrait  
Landscape  
Portrait  
Width Height Width Height Width Height Width Height  
C
Portrait  
22.7  
16.7  
34.7  
22.7  
40.7  
28.7  
17.6  
23.6  
23.6  
35.6  
29.6  
41.6  
17.6  
23.6  
23.6  
35.6  
29.6  
41.6  
35.6  
22.7  
16.7  
34.7  
22.7  
40.7  
28.7  
46.7  
576  
423  
880  
576  
1033  
728  
447  
600  
600  
904  
752  
1057  
447  
600  
600  
904  
752  
1057  
904  
576  
423  
Landscape  
Portrait  
D
880  
Landscape  
Portrait  
576  
E1  
E
1033  
728  
Landscape  
Portrait  
N/A  
N/A  
1185  
Landscape  
34.7  
47.6  
N/A  
880  
1209  
N/A  
Indicates this printable area is available only if you are using the A0+/E+ size format  
printer  
   
ISO paper  
The following table lists the printable area for the ISO paper size system.  
The left and right margins are 0.2 in (5 mm) and the leading and trailing edge margins are 0.7 in (17 mm).  
Where: Printable area = Paper Size – Margins  
Printable areas for ISO paper  
Printable area (width × height) by image orientation  
Orientationof  
Inches  
Millimeters  
Paper  
size  
paper in  
printer  
Landscape  
Portrait  
Landscape  
Portrait  
Width Height Width Height Width Height Width Height  
A4  
Portrait  
10.4  
6.9  
7.9  
7.9  
10.4  
6.9  
263  
176  
386  
263  
560  
386  
806  
560  
200  
287  
287  
410  
410  
584  
584  
830  
200  
287  
287  
410  
410  
584  
584  
830  
830  
263  
176  
386  
263  
560  
386  
806  
560  
1154  
Landscape  
Portrait  
11.3  
11.3  
16.1  
16.1  
23.0  
23.0  
32.7  
11.3  
11.3  
16.1  
16.1  
23.0  
23.0  
32.7  
32.7  
A3  
A2  
A1  
A0  
15.2  
10.4  
22.0  
15.2  
31.7  
22.0  
15.2  
10.4  
22.0  
15.2  
31.7  
22.0  
45.4  
Landscape  
Portrait  
Landscape  
Portrait  
Landscape  
Portrait  
N/A  
N/A  
Indicates this printable area is available only if you are using the A0+/E+ size format  
printer  
   
Roll paper  
The following procedures are described in detail, with animations where appropriate:  
Installing a new roll on the printer  
Loading roll paper  
Unloading roll paper  
Removing roll paper from the spindle  
Cutter replacement  
 
Installing a new roll on the printer  
The graphical sequence shows how to install a new roll of paper on the printer.  
CAUTION: Make sure the printer wheels are locked (the brake lever on each wheel is pressed Down) to  
prevent the printer from moving.  
If you are a regular user of different types of roll paper, you can change the paper quicker if you have more than  
one spindle. This allows you to do the following:  
1. Pre-load the different types of paper onto the spindles.  
2. Remove and replace the spindle with the new type of paper.  
NOTE:  
Additional spindles are available from Hewlett-Packard as accessories.  
     
Loading roll paper  
The graphical sequence shows how to load a new roll of paper on the printer.  
NOTE:  
You must have installed a new roll of paper on the printer before you can load it.  
The front-panel menu items are:  
Then press:  
Select (using the keys)  
1. Paper  
Enter  
Enter  
Enter  
2. Load Roll  
3. Select Roll Type  
     
Unloading roll paper  
The graphical sequence shows how to unload a roll of paper from the printer.  
   
Removing roll paper from the printer  
The graphical sequence shows how to remove a roll of paper from the printer.  
NOTE:  
You must have unloaded the roll of paper from the printer before you can remove it.  
   
Removing roll paper from the spindle  
The graphical sequence shows how to remove a roll of paper from the roll spindle.  
NOTE:  
You must have removed the roll of paper from the printer before you can remove it from the  
spindle.  
   
Cutter replacement  
The graphical sequence shows the complete procedure for the replacement of the paper cutter in your printer.  
Prerequisites  
Before attempting to replace the cutter you must contact your local HP Customer Care center to:  
Order the replacement cutter.  
Receive instructions on how to access the front panel Service menu.  
Important information  
The cutter unit is attached to the printer by a black cutter holder that runs along the metal guide rail, and is  
hooked onto the edge of the platen at the front of the printer.  
The cutting wheel is inside the cutter unit.  
Do not remove the cutter holder.  
When inserting the new cutter, with the cutter holder raised to about 45 degrees, partially insert the cutter so it  
rests in the cutter holder, but do NOT clip it in at this stage.  
CAUTION: Be very careful when replacing the cutter because you can easily break the cutter holder if you  
apply too much force.  
   
Sheet paper  
Which side up?  
Explains how to identify which side of the sheet should be printed on.  
Which edge first?  
Explains which edge of the sheet should be loaded first (short edge or long edge).  
Loading sheet paper  
Details the sheet loading procedure.  
Unloading sheet paper  
Details the sheet unloading procedure.  
 
Which side up?  
The printer prints on the side of the paper that faces up. It may be important to load the sheet with the correct side  
facing up. See the table below.  
Print side for paper types  
Paper type  
Matte or glossy  
HP Bright White Inkjet Paper (Bond)  
HP Vellum  
Both sides are the same. If sheet  
is curled, load with curl down.  
Natural Tracing Paper  
Coated Paper  
Load with the coated side up.  
Heavy Coated Paper  
Matte Film  
Load with the matte side up.  
Load with the glossy side up.  
High-Gloss Photo  
Clear Film  
Translucent Bond  
Both sides are the same. If sheet  
is curled, load with curl down.  
Canvas  
Poster Paper  
Plain Paper  
Both sides are the same. If sheet  
is curled, load with curl down.  
   
Which edge first?  
You can load sheet paper in either portrait or landscape orientation. Unless you are using the Rotate option,  
always load the sheet in the same orientation as you have specified in your software.  
Landscape (long edge first)  
Portrait (short edge first)  
   
Loading sheet paper  
The graphical sequence shows how to load a new sheet of paper on the printer.  
Important  
If you have a roll of paper loaded on the printer you must first unload it from the printer.  
Make sure the correct side of the sheet is facing up when you load it.  
The front panel menu selections are:  
Select (using the keys)  
1. Paper  
Then press:  
Enter  
Enter  
Enter  
2. Load sheet  
3. Select Sheet Type  
     
Unloading sheet paper  
The graphical sequence shows how to unload a sheet of paper from the printer.  
Important  
To give the ink time to dry the printer holds the paper for some time.  
   
Ink system  
These topics cover the various elements of the ink system.  
What are HP ink supplies?  
Details the elements of the HP ink supplies.  
Component identification  
Shows you where to find the various elements of the ink system.  
Ink supply guidelines  
Explains how to obtain the best results from your ink system.  
Precautions  
Details the specific precautions you must take to avoid damaging the components of your ink system.  
Color calibration  
Explains how to calibrate the ink system for the type of paper loaded  
Drying time  
Explains drying time function and details how to use it to ensure you obtain the highest quality print under all  
conditions.  
   
What are HP ink supplies?  
For each of the four ink colors used in the printer, there are two separate components, the printhead and the  
ink cartridge. These components are called the HP ink supplies and are coded with a Hewlett-Packard selection  
number to help you reorder the correct replacement. Your printer uses the following HP ink supplies:  
Black ink cartridges are HP No 82 supplies.  
Cyan, magenta and yellow cartridges are HP No 82 supplies. They are available in 28 and 69 ml sizes.  
All printheads are HP No 11 supplies.  
Ink cartridges  
The Hewlett-Packard ink cartridges for your printer require no maintenance or cleaning. As long as each ink  
cartridge is inserted correctly into its slot, the ink will flow to the printheads. Because the printheads control the  
amount of ink transferred to the page, you will continue to see high-quality printing results, even when the ink  
levels are getting low.  
The front panel notifies you when an ink cartridge’s ink level is low. You can also check the ink levels of all the ink  
cartridges to determine if an ink cartridge needs to be replaced, see Ink cartridge information.  
If the ink cartridge is empty, the printer stops printing. See Ink cartridge replacement.  
Printheads  
The Hewlett-Packard printheads are extremely durable and do not need to be replaced every time an ink cartridge  
is replaced. They are independent of the ink cartridges and will continue giving excellent print quality results even  
if the ink cartridges are low in ink.  
If you notice a decline in print quality such as lines or dots missing from text or graphics, see Stepped lines.  
 
Component identification  
The following illustration will help you identify the components of the HP ink supplies.  
Printheads  
Ink cartridges  
The Hewlett-Packard selection number on the ink cartridges and printheads makes it easy for you to find the  
correct HP ink supplies for your printer. Determine the color of the printhead or ink cartridge you need, then make  
sure you purchase or order the correct Hewlett-Packard printhead or ink cartridge. Each ink cartridge and  
printhead can be purchased separately from your usual Hewlett-Packard retailer. See Ordering accessories.  
   
Ink supply guidelines  
For optimum results from your printer and the ink system, always follow these guidelines when handling HP ink  
supplies:  
Always install the ink cartridges and printheads before the expiry date, which is on the packaging.  
Install ink cartridges and printheads in their color-coded slots.  
Follow the instructions on the front panel during installation.  
Avoid unnecessary removal of the ink cartridges and printheads.  
When turning off your printer, always use the power-off button on the front panel. The printheads are then  
parked correctly, which prevents them from drying out.  
The ink cartridges should never be removed while the printer is printing. They should be removed only when  
the printer is ready for you to replace them. The front panel will guide you through the removal and installation  
procedure. See When to Replace HP ink supplies.  
CAUTION: When you first received your printer it was supplied with a set of four setup printheads installed  
in the printhead carriage. These setup printheads are used for the priming of the tubes in the  
modular ink delivery system. Do not remove the setup printheads from the carriage without  
following the procedures in the Assembly and Set-up Poster.  
 
Precautions  
Handle HP ink supplies with care. In particular, the printhead, which is a high-precision device, must be handled  
carefully.  
CAUTION: Do not touch, wipe or attempt to clean the printhead nozzles. This can damage the printhead.  
Do not put the printhead down on the nozzles.  
Do not be rough when handling the printheads.  
Always set them down gently.  
Do not drop the printheads. Proper handling will  
assure optimum performance throughout the  
printhead life.  
Do not touch the end of the ink cartridge that is  
inserted into the printer as there may be a small  
amount of ink on the connection.  
Avoid storing partly used ink cartridges on their  
ends.  
   
Color calibration  
You can calibrate the ink system for the specific paper loaded in your printer. Doing this ensures the printed  
output matches the colors of the original image as closely as possible. The printer stores the calibration data for  
each type of paper you have calibrated it for since it was powered up. Once the printer has been powered down,  
the next time you use it only the last calibration made will be available and it will print using these calibration data.  
To color-calibrate your printer, first make sure you have the correct type of paper loaded and then make the  
following front-panel selections:  
Then press:  
Select (using the keys)  
1. Ink  
Enter  
Enter  
Enter  
2. Color calibration  
3. Calibrate Paper  
The printer prints a calibration pattern and scans it to create the calibration data for the type of paper loaded.  
If you want to check the color-calibration status of your printer, make the following front-panel selections:  
Then press:  
Select (using the keys)  
1. Ink  
Enter  
Enter  
Enter  
2. Color calibration  
3. Status  
The front panel display shows what types of paper the ink system is currently calibrated for.  
To remove all the calibrations and reset the printer to its factory values choose  
Color calibration > Reset from the Ink menu.  
 
Drying time  
The following topics detail the drying time function and how to use it to ensure you obtain the highest quality print  
under all conditions.  
Drying time settings  
Describes how to set the required drying times from the front panel.  
Typical drying times  
Lists typical drying times for Hewlett-Packard tested paper at approximately 25°C with 50% relative humidity.  
Drying procedure  
Details how the drying procedure operates.  
   
Drying time settings  
With some paper types and environmental conditions the ink needs time to dry before the paper is unloaded. The  
printer has three settings which you can choose through the front panel. See Navigation example for more help.  
Manual: The printer holds in place paper which has a specific drying time, and displays a “drying time to go”  
countdown on the front panel. You can change this time from one minute to 99 minutes in one minute increments.  
Automatic: The printer automatically determines the appropriate drying time, based on the type of paper you  
have selected and the current temperature. If there is any drying time the printer displays a “drying time to go”  
countdown on the front panel.  
None: With this setting, when the printer has finished printing an image, the paper will fall into the paper bin under  
the printer.  
CAUTION: Changing the drying time to speed up the printer could result in damage to your printed image  
or reduce the quality of your print.  
       
Typical drying times  
The following table shows the typical drying times for Hewlett-Packard tested paper at approximately 25°C with  
50% relative humidity.  
Drying times by paper type  
Drying time (seconds)  
Hewlett-Packard tested paper  
type  
Fast  
Normal  
Best  
HP Bright White Inkjet Paper (Bond)  
HP Vellum  
0
25  
60  
120  
180  
HP Natural Tracing Paper  
HP Coated Paper  
0
0
60  
60  
HP Heavyweight Coated Paper  
HP Matte Film  
60  
120  
180  
HP High-Gloss Photo Paper  
HP Semi-Gloss Photo Paper  
HP Paper-Based Semi-Gloss  
HP Clear Film  
60  
120  
6000  
60  
HP Translucent Bond  
HP Studio Canvas  
60  
180  
HP Satin Poster Paper  
HP Banners with Tyvek®  
HP Colorfast Adhesive Vinyl  
   
Drying procedure  
The drying procedure operates as follows:  
1. The printed image emerges from beneath the printer window and a vacuum holds it on the platen of the  
printer.  
2. The front panel displays:  
The countdown  
timer indicates  
how much  
drying time  
remains  
3. You can press the Cancel or the Form Feed & Cut key to cancel the drying time and release the paper.  
4. After the drying time has elapsed:  
For roll paper the printer cuts the paper and turns off the vacuum so the printed image can drop into the printer bin.  
For sheet paper the vacuum is turned off and the printed image drops into the printer bin.  
   
Ink cartridges  
Ink cartridge errors  
Details the error messages that could be displayed on the front panel for the ink cartridges.  
Ink cartridge levels  
Details the information about levels that can be displayed on the front panel for the ink cartridges.  
Ink cartridge information  
Shows you how to display the current status of the ink cartridges on the front-panel display.  
Ink cartridge replacement  
Details the ink cartridge replacement procedure.  
   
Ink cartridge errors  
The front panel can display the following error messages for the ink cartridges:  
Cartridge  
missing  
Cartridge  
nearly  
reached  
end of life  
Faulty  
cartridge  
Cartridge  
empty  
The printer will also display the Ink cartridge levels.  
 
Ink cartridge levels  
The front panel will tell you when your ink supply is low, very low or empty. This means that you know the current  
status of your HP ink supplies at all times.  
Cartridges  
Low ink  
full  
warning  
Cartridge  
empty  
NOTE:  
NOTE:  
Depending on type of print jobs, a cartridge with a low ink warning may in fact last quite a long  
time (for example, with line drawings).  
The ink cartridge level information can also be selected with  
Ink menu > Information > Ink Cartridges > Ink Levels if it is not automatically shown in the Ink  
menu.  
 
Ink cartridge information  
Use the following procedure to display the ink cartridge information screen on the front panel.  
The front-panel menu items are:  
Then press:  
Select (using the keys)  
1. Ink  
Enter  
Enter  
Enter  
2. Information  
3. Ink Cartridges  
4. Cyan, Magenta, Yellow or Black Enter  
Ink cartridge  
The front panel displays the following information for the selected ink cartridge:  
Color: Cyan, Magenta, Yellow or Black  
Model: Hewlett-Packard No 82  
Status: inserted, low on ink, out of ink, missing, expired and faulty  
Expiration date  
Serial number  
Ink level: in cc and % used  
   
Ink cartridge replacement  
The graphical sequence shows how to replace an ink cartridge.  
WARNING: Make sure the printer wheels are locked (the brake lever is pressed down) to prevent the printer  
from moving.  
CAUTION: Remove an ink cartridge only if you are replacing it.  
CAUTION: Do not replace cartridges while the printer is printing because doing this will cancel the current  
print job.  
You need to change cartridges either if prompted to do so on the front panel because the printer has detected a  
cartridge is out of ink, or if the cartridge is low and you want to replace it before it runs out.  
     
Printheads  
Printhead errors  
Details the different error messages that could be displayed on the front panel for the printheads.  
Printhead information  
Shows you how to display the current status of the printheads on the front panel display.  
Printhead replacement  
Details the printhead replacement procedure.  
Printhead alignment  
Details the printhead alignment procedure.  
 
Printhead errors  
The front panel can display the following error messages for the printheads:  
Printhead  
missing  
Printhead  
worn out  
Faulty  
printhead  
Unknown  
error  
NOTE:  
An unknown error is displayed when one of the printheads is causing a problem but the system  
cannot detect which one it is. Refer to Unknown printhead error to solve this problem.  
 
Printhead information  
Use the following procedure to display the printheads information screen on the front panel.  
The front panel menu selections are:  
Then press:  
Select (using the keys)  
1. Ink  
Enter  
Enter  
Enter  
2. Information  
3. Printhead  
4. Cyan, Magenta, Yellow or Black Enter  
printhead  
The front panel displays the following information for the selected printhead:  
Color: Cyan, Magenta, Yellow or Black  
Model: Hewlett-Packard No 11 and Warranty (In warranty or Out of warranty)  
Status: inserted, missing, faulty worn-out and unknown.  
If there is a problem the system displays an action: missing -> insert, unknown -> troubleshoot,  
faulty, worn out -> replace.  
Expiration date  
Serial number  
Ink used: in cc and % used  
Paper jams  
If the printheads are aligned and color-calibrated  
   
Printhead replacement  
The graphical sequence shows how to replace a printhead in the printer.  
The front-panel menu selections are:  
Then press:  
Select (using the keys)  
1. Ink  
2. Replace Printheads  
Enter  
Enter  
Once you have replaced the printhead, if you have paper loaded, the printer prompts you to start the Printhead  
alignment procedure. If no paper is loaded the printer prompts you to load paper and then automatically starts the  
alignment. The alignment takes several minutes to complete and the printer will then prompt you to run the Color  
calibration procedure.  
     
Printhead alignment  
You should have one of the following types of paper loaded before attempting to align the printheads: HP Bright  
White Inkjet Paper (Bond), HP Coated Paper, HP Heavyweight Coated Paper, HP High-Gloss Photo Paper, HP  
Satin Poster Paper or Plain Paper. If you try to do this with any other type of paper loaded, the printer will prompt  
you to load a different type of paper before letting you align the printheads.  
From time to time you may be required to align the printheads to ensure maximum print quality. To select  
Printhead Alignment manually, make sure you have the correct type of roll or sheet paper loaded.  
There are two types of alignment: Standard which will take about 4½ minutes; and Special which takes about  
11 minutes. Standard alignment is recommended for normal use and requires paper of at least A4/Letter-size,  
loaded in landscape mode. Special alignment should be used to correct printhead to paper spacing variations  
which would be shown by variations in vertical line quality, particularly in wide plots and fast print modes. Special  
alignment requires paper of at least A3/B-size, loaded in landscape mode. Two separate prints are made.  
Then use the following front panel menu selections to start the alignment:  
Then press:  
Select (using the keys)  
1. Ink  
Enter  
Enter  
Enter  
2. Align Printheads  
3. Standard (4.5 minutes)  
Special (11 minutes)  
Once you have made this selection the printer starts the alignment process, which then takes several minutes.  
The printer will also automatically use the standard alignment process to align its printheads after Printhead  
replacement. When the alignment procedure completes after a printhead replacement, the printer asks if you want  
to run the Color calibration procedure.  
     
Solutions  
These topics guide you through the different procedures required to troubleshoot and find the solutions to various  
problems you could encounter while using your printer.  
This chapter contains the following topics:  
Solving problems helps you to quickly troubleshoot your specific problem; it also contains instructions on  
where you can get further information.  
Print quality problems helps you to solve any print quality problems you may be experiencing. It takes you  
through the troubleshooting procedure step by step.  
Ink supply problems guides you when you have problems installing the consumable ink items: the ink  
cartridges and printheads.  
Paper problems contains information on what to do if you have image smears or marks on your paper, and  
also what to do if you have a paper jam.  
Image error contains information on what to do if the image that your printer printed is incorrect, or not what  
you expected.  
Other problems covers miscellaneous problems you could face.  
Getting help explains what to do if you cannot solve a problem. It also provides full details of the steps to  
take to contact the Hewlett-Packard Customer Care Center.  
 
Solving problems  
To find the meaning of front-panel messages, see Message descriptions.  
If you know the problem is related to a certain task, first check the relevant section in this manual, for step-by-  
step procedures. Use this manual’s index or table of contents to find the section. For example, if you are  
having difficulty with page formatting, refer to Page format.  
If the problem is directly related to the quality of your printed images, refer first to Print quality problems.  
Refer to the appropriate topic:  
Ink supply problems  
Paper problems  
Communication problems  
Image error  
Other problems  
If the problem could be related to your software driver, and you are using an HP driver, refer to the driver’s  
troubleshooting documentation and the on-line help in your application software.  
If the problem has no obvious cause, refer to Finding the source of your problem.  
If you still cannot solve the problem, see Getting help.  
   
Finding the source of your problem  
1. Look at the front-panel display for messages. See Message descriptions for a full explanation of front-panel  
messages.  
2. Test the printer.  
Switch the printer off on the front of the printer. Make sure that the power cord is firmly inserted in the  
printer and plugged in to an outlet that you know works.  
Switch the printer on and make sure the front-panel display shows the HP welcome screen followed by  
Main Menu after a short initialization period.  
3. Test your computer hardware and interface.  
Make sure that you have the correct interface cable between the computer and the printer and that it is  
firmly connected to the correct ports (see the Assembly and Set-up Poster).  
   
Print quality problems  
Your printer provides a full troubleshooting utility to ensure you can always quickly overcome any image problems  
you encounter. You should use this utility whenever you (and not the printer) perceive a problem with print quality.  
Often what you believe to be a print quality problem is in fact caused by incorrect configuration of the printer for  
the type of image you are trying to print. Always check Configuration correction as your first diagnostic task to find  
the cause of your problem.  
If a message, such as “PRINTHEADS not functional” appears on the front panel of your printer, follow the  
instructions given for the particular message (see Message descriptions).  
The types of problems you could possibly encounter are:  
Stepped lines  
Incomplete lines  
Color accuracy  
Horizontal banding  
Color alignment  
Whenever you see any of these problems, work through the Troubleshooting procedure replying to the questions  
displayed on the front panel. This will lead you to correct remedial action required to solve your print quality  
problem.  
   
Configuration correction  
Before attempting the print quality diagnostic procedures contained in this section, you should first check that the  
printer is correctly configured to print what you want. Many problems concerned with print quality can be solved by  
correcting the way the printer is configured.  
1. To achieve the best performance from your printer, only use genuine HP accessories and supplies, whose  
reliability and performance have been thoroughly tested to give trouble-free performance and best-quality  
prints. For details of HP paper, see Paper types.  
2. Make sure that the Type of paper selected in the front panel is the same type of paper loaded into the printer.  
To check this go to the Roll or Sheet menu in the front panel and press Enter.  
3. To ensure the maximum print quality use HP certified paper only. For details of HP paper see Physical  
characteristics of paper types. You can also look at the Web page http://www.hp.com/go/graphic-arts/ for the  
most up-to-date information.  
4. Make sure that the Print quality (Fast, Normal, Best) used for your printer is correct. This is set in the Print  
Setup dialog box of the printer driver or in the front panel from the Set-up menu. The printer driver setting  
overrides the front panel setting.  
5. Select Best print mode for maximum print quality.  
6. For Non-HP drivers, set front panel paper settings to match the paper type loaded in the printer. The  
documentation that came with your software should provide information about paper type/print quality  
settings.  
7. If your print quality problem is color accuracy related, go to Color accuracy for further configuration help.  
   
Troubleshooting procedure  
Working through the Troubleshooting procedure should always be your first action when you encounter print  
quality problems. Refer to the Troubleshooting flowchart for a description of the sequence of processes used to  
complete troubleshooting procedure.  
It is important that the paper loaded for this procedure is exactly that used when you encountered print quality  
problems, type (for example, glossy paper) and size. If you use a different kind of paper or a different size, you  
stand less likelihood of resolving the problem.  
Running the Troubleshooting Utility  
1. From the main front-panel menu, select the Ink menu ( ) and press Enter.  
2. Select Troubleshooting and press Enter.  
3. The printer first checks to see whether the  
printheads are aligned. Misalignment of the  
printheads is a common cause of print quality  
problems. If they are not aligned, you are prompted  
to accept Printhead alignment. This procedure  
requires a few centimeters of paper loaded and takes several minutes to perform.  
NOTE:  
Note that you do not have to interpret the patterns printed by the Printhead Alignment routine.  
4. If the printheads do not seem to require alignment, the printer prints Diagnostic Print A. See Diagnostic Print  
A interpretation for full details of how to use this diagnostic print.  
   
Diagnostic Print A interpretation  
Diagnostic Print A  
Diagnostic Print A contains several blocks of color and a block of thin black  
broken lines (the lines are actually very much closer than those represented  
here).  
1. Examine the broken lines in Diagnostic Print A carefully and indicate whether  
there are problems with them. The sorts of problems to look for here are:  
Jaggedness or serrations in the thin lines, like this:  
; the thin lines should be straight,  
though not necessarily perfectly aligned. The irregularities that are significant  
extend along the whole of the length of the lines. Shorter irregularities,  
arranged in columns, can be ignored at this stage.  
Ignore this  
black bar  
2. Examine the blocks of color in Diagnostic Print A carefully and indicate whether  
there are problems with them. The sorts of problems to look for here are:  
White streaks or bands in the solid blocks.  
3. If you indicate that there is a problem with the dashed lines in Diagnostic Print A,  
you are prompted to use the Advance calibration routine; your printer will be at step 3 of the routine (if you don’t  
want to continue with calibration, press the Cancel key).  
4. If there are problems in the blocks of color in Diagnostic Print A, for example white streaks or bands, the printer will  
try to clean the printheads that have the problem. A printhead can be cleaned up to three times this way; after that  
it cannot be cleaned and you will be told; the Troubleshooting routine will finish. In that case we recommend that  
you try to reprint your print, and then, if necessary, start the Troubleshooting routine again.  
After cleaning the printheads, the printer reprints the blocks of color (but not the black lines) in Diagnostic Print A,  
and asks you to examine it again (as in step 1).  
5. If there are no problems the first time you print Diagnostic Print A, the printer prints Diagnostic Print B. See  
Diagnostic Print B interpretation for full details of how to use this diagnostic print.  
   
Diagnostic Print B interpretation  
1. For each color in the pattern in Diagnostic Print B, you are asked about the  
quality—look for missing lines. If you answer that a color is defective, the  
printer tries to clean that printhead.  
Diagnostic Print B  
If the printhead cleaning process completes, Diagnostic Print B is printed  
again and you are asked the same questions again.  
Ignore these  
solid bars  
2. Afterwards, if problems with images remain, use the Troubleshooting  
procedure again.  
If none of the patterns or blocks in the two Diagnostic Prints shows any problem, it could be that your print  
quality problem is caused by a wrong setting in your software, or perhaps the job should have been printed with  
the Print quality set to Best instead of Normal or Draft.  
If the Troubleshooting routine didn’t indicate that printhead alignment was necessary, you can select Align  
printheads in the Ink menu to try to solve any further print quality problems.  
 
Troubleshooting flowchart  
The following diagram shows the flow of the troubleshooting procedure.  
Printer recommends  
Printhead alignment  
(Standard or Special)  
Printer checks  
whether Printhead  
Alignment is required  
Yes  
Start  
No  
Printer prints  
Printer prints  
Diagnostic Print A  
including black lines  
Diagnostic Print A  
without black lines  
Printheads need  
cleaning. If possible  
printer tries to clean  
printheads  
Printer asks questions  
about Diagnostic  
Print A  
Wrong paper advance.  
Printer recommends  
Advance calibration  
Printheads are OK  
after first printing of  
Diagnostic Print A  
Yes  
Indicates that  
troubleshooting has  
completed but further  
procedures are required  
to solve the problem  
No  
If printheads have  
been cleaned three  
time Troubleshooting  
finishes  
Printer prints  
Printer prints  
Diagnostic Print B  
Diagnostic Print B  
without black lines  
Indicates that  
troubleshooting has  
completed successfully  
and there no problems  
Printer asks if Cyan,  
Magenta, Yellow and  
Black Patterns in  
Diagnostic Print B are  
OK  
No  
If possible printer tries  
to clean printheads  
Yes  
Troubleshooting  
completed successfully  
No problems detected  
 
Advance calibration  
It is important that the paper loaded for this calibration is exactly that used for normal printing, both in quality (for  
example, glossy paper) and in width (for example, A0 or 36 in). Either roll or sheet paper can be used.  
The routine prints a pattern and then cuts the roll (the cutter must be set to On—see Controlling the cutter) or  
ejects the sheet; it requires paper that is at least 65 cm/25.5 in long and at least 50 cm/19.7 in wide. You must  
then reload that piece of paper as a sheet, so that the printer can accurately measure the pattern, and make  
whatever adjustments are appropriate to the amount it advances between printing swaths of data. (See Loading  
sheet paper)  
The pattern printed is solely for the use of the printer; you are not expected to relate any of its characteristics to the  
quality of your images.  
1. From the main front-panel menu, with the correct paper loaded, select the Paper menu ( ) and press Enter.  
2. Select Advance calibration and press Enter.  
3. Select Create pattern and press Enter.  
The printer prints its calibration pattern (as represented here) and  
cuts or ejects the paper.  
4. Load the sheet printed side up with the dotted line at the top (that is,  
rotated 90º).  
5. Now select Measure pattern and press Enter.  
The printer reads the calibration pattern and makes the appropriate  
internal adjustments.  
These Advance calibration values are used whenever you print on the  
same type of paper until you have used the Advance calibration twice  
more with different types of paper.  
Direction of paper when  
loading (measuring pattern)  
       
Advance calibration values  
The printer stores the advance calibration values of the last two  
different types of paper used for the calibration. When you print, the  
printer tries to match the paper you have selected to the stored  
values. If there is a match the printer applies the stored Advance  
calibration values.  
If the type of paper you are using has not been used for either of the  
last two Advance calibrations, the printer uses a set of default values  
for your paper.  
The Restore factory option of the Advance calibration menu erases any stored advance calibration values from  
the printer memory. This means that until you run the advance calibration again the printer will use the factory  
default values for all types of paper.  
 
Stepped lines  
When you look at the image you have printed there are ‘stepped lines’ in the borders of arrows and diagonal  
lines. The lines should be straight with no stepping.  
The following is an example of what you might see if you have problems with stepped lines.  
To solve this problem:  
1. Increase the dpi setting by changing the print quality to Best in the front panel and driver software.  
2. The problems may be inherent in the image you are trying to print. Try to improve the image with the  
application that generated the file.  
   
Incomplete lines  
When you look at the image you have printed there are:  
Missing or faint lines.  
Printed characters with missing parts.  
The following is an example of what you might see if you have problems with incomplete lines.  
TEST  
Missing parts of text; this  
should say TEST  
See the Troubleshooting procedure for instructions on how to solve this problem.  
   
Color alignment  
When you look at the image you have printed:  
The colored lines are printed  
double and they are the wrong  
colors  
Vertical lines are misaligned or  
fuzzy (not smooth)  
The borders of colored blocks  
are overlapped and the  
overlapping areas have  
different colors in them.  
See the Troubleshooting procedure for instructions on how to solve this problem.  
   
Horizontal banding  
When you look at the image you have printed there are light or dark lines on the image, these are particularly  
highlighted in high density ink areas. This problem is known as banding.  
IMPORTANT  
Banding can occur to a certain degree in Fast and Normal mode when printing high  
density prints. To obtain the best image always print in Best Mode.  
The following is an example of what you might see if you have problems with banding.  
8
0
Pojfdjop ernk aure  
Expanding Possibilities  
8 0  
8 0  
Ironk  
Pojfdjop ernk aure  
Pojfdjop ernk Chorme  
Expanding Possibilities  
8 0  
kheuhg sfrfefg  
kheuhg sfrfefg  
8 0  
Ink cartridge  
In  
k
e
ro  
v
C
a
p
s
See the Troubleshooting procedure for instructions on how to solve this problem.  
   
Color accuracy  
These are the areas you should review when troubleshooting a color accuracy problem:  
Paper  
Ensure that the paper loaded is genuine HP paper and that the correct paper type is selected on the front panel  
and in the driver.  
Related Topics  
Color consistency problems  
Long-term color bleeding (glossy paper)  
Color accuracy configuration  
Additional color accuracy information  
   
Color consistency problems  
Some paper may discolor or change with age. Check that your paper is fresh and has been stored correctly.  
If the environmental conditions you are printing in change rapidly, you may see changes in the color  
consistency. By reducing the time the print stays in extreme environmental conditions after being printed  
(especially very high humidity) you can reduce the color consistency problems.  
There may be color changes between images printed on your printer and other types of HP Designjet printers.  
This is quite normal because the other printers use different inks.  
Long-term color bleeding (glossy paper)  
High ambient humidity at your location could cause the colors to bleed into the paper making the lines fuzzy and  
bleary.  
Change the paper that you are printing with or remove the printer from the high humidity conditions.  
     
Color accuracy configuration  
The configurations of the printer defines how ink is applied to each type of paper. Use the information in the  
following table to configure your printer and software for best color accuracy.  
Location of  
setting  
Setting description  
Selection  
Set to match the paper type loaded in the printer.  
See Paper types.  
Ink menu  
Color Calibration > Calibrate  
Paper  
   
Additional color accuracy information  
The means of accurately managing the colors printed by your printer vary with the software application and driver  
being used. Refer to the following documentation:  
On-line documentation in the drivers shipped with your printer.  
If you cannot find any reason for the discrepancy, before getting help, find out for which CMYK printer inks the  
colors have been specified.  
   
Ink supply problems  
Most of the problems that you could encounter when working with HP ink supplies can be solved with guidance  
from the front panel. The only exception to this is the Unknown printhead error. A full list of front messages is  
supplied in Message descriptions.  
Printhead problems after replacement  
If, after replacing the printheads, the printer complains about wrong or missing printheads, perform the following  
steps:  
Check that you have removed the protective tape from the printhead.  
Insert the printhead into the carriage assembly, but this time close the cover using the latch.  
Replace the printhead with a new one, see Printhead replacement.  
Problems inserting the ink cartridge  
1. Make sure that you have the correct HP ink supplies ink cartridge.  
2. Make sure that the cartridge is the correct color for that slot.  
3. Make sure the cartridge is in the correct orientation, with the color-coded label at the top.  
Never clean inside the ink cartridge slots.  
Problems inserting the printhead  
1. Make sure that you have the correct HP ink supplies printhead.  
2. Make sure that the printhead is the correct color for that slot.  
3. Make sure that the printhead is in the correct orientation.  
See Printhead replacement for further details.  
         
Unknown printhead error  
An unknown printhead error occurs when the one of the printheads is causing a  
problem but the system cannot detect which one it is. Whenever this happens the  
front panel displays this error message. The number of printheads with unknown  
errors will either be all the color printheads or all the printheads.  
Use the following procedure to isolate the faulty printhead.  
1. Select Replace Printheads from the front panel.  
2. Open the carriage cover and remove all the printheads.  
3. Reinsert the Cyan printhead only and close the carriage cover and the window.  
4. Check the front panel—if the status of the Cyan printhead is X or ?, the conclusion is that the Cyan printhead  
is faulty and must be replaced. If the status of the Cyan printhead is OK, the conclusion is that the Cyan  
printhead is working correctly. Repeat the process from step 1 for each of the other printheads to identify  
which one is failing.  
   
Paper problems  
Paper  
Details the general rules to follow to avoid paper problems.  
Clearing a paper jam  
Describes how to clear a paper jam.  
Ink marks on the paper  
Details the way to solve ink mark problems: warped lines, blurred lines, marks or scratches on glossy paper.  
Paper loading problems  
Explains what to do when the front panel keeps indicating that paper is misaligned or incorrectly positioned.  
Paper output problems  
Explains what to do when the prints fall on the floor or do not stack correctly in the paper bin.  
 
Paper  
Always make sure that you are using the appropriate paper for your image and that it is consistent with your  
software application. To ensure color accuracy and print-quality performance of the printer, use only paper types  
that have been certified for your printer.  
Use of non-HP paper or HP paper not certified for your printer may significantly reduce the color and print quality  
of your images. For details of HP paper, see Paper types.  
   
Clearing a paper jam  
If the front panel displays this message:  
There is probably paper jammed in the printer. Paper jams can have  
various causes:  
The paper is too thick or too thin for the printer, or is otherwise not  
supported.  
The paper is creased, misaligned, or bubbled.  
Too much ink is being placed on the paper causing it to cockle or bubble.  
The end of the roll of paper is glued to the core and won’t advance further.  
Pieces of paper or paper powder are clogging up the cutter guide or other moving parts.  
See Removing jammed paper for full instructions on how to clear jammed paper.  
     
Removing jammed paper  
1. Open the window.  
2. Switch the printer off at the front.  
3. If necessary, carefully move the printhead carriage out of the way—if possible all the way to the enclosed area  
on the left or the right. Which way you are able to move it depends on where the paper is jammed.  
CAUTION: When moving the printhead carriage, touch only the black plastic parts.  
4. If necessary, carefully move the paper cutter out of the way to the left,  
or to the right depending on where the paper is jammed (though if  
moved right it may block the paper path).  
Slider bar  
Guide  
CAUTION: The cutter is easily moved by holding it as close as  
possible to the guide running across the width of the  
printer. Be careful not to touch the metal slider bar that  
runs across the printer.  
5. If necessary, lift the blue paper lever, to release any trapped paper.  
Remember to lower it again when you have finished.  
6. Carefully remove any of the jammed paper which you can easily lift up and out from the top of the printer.  
7. Carefully pull the rest of the roll or sheet down and out of the printer. You may need to cut the edge of the roll  
with scissors.  
8. Check that the printing zone, including the cutter guide, the paper path, and the area where the printhead  
carriage is parked, is clear and clean; remove any paper powder by brushing it away or with a vacuum  
cleaner.  
CAUTION: The area where the printhead carriage is parked can get quite dirty; be careful not to get ink on  
your hands.  
9. Close the window and switch on the printer.  
10. Wait for the printer to finish initializing.  
 
11. Press the Form Feed and Cut key on the front panel to eject any small pieces of paper that are still in the  
paper path.  
12. Reload the paper as normal (see Loading roll paper or Loading sheet paper). If you are using roll paper you  
may need to trim the edge first, to ensure that it is straight.  
NOTE:  
If there is still paper left in the paper path, try loading a sheet of stiff or rigid paper into the  
printer, such as heavyweight coated or matte film; this will help to force out any paper jammed  
in the paper path.  
13. If the cutter seems to be causing the problem, check in Paper types that the type of paper is supported by the  
printer. Try disabling the cutter from the front panel; use Cutter Off.  
You are strongly recommended to align the printheads (see Printhead alignment) after clearing a paper jam, as  
the problem may have caused the printheads to be misaligned.  
Ink marks on the paper  
Warped lines  
Blurred lines (ink “bleeds” from lines)  
Marks or scratches on glossy paper after printing  
Smears or scratching on your printed paper  
 
Warped lines  
The paper itself may be warped. This can happen if it has been used or not been stored in the correct  
environmental conditions.  
For all environmental specifications, see Environmental specifications.  
Blurred lines (ink “bleeds” from lines)  
Perhaps you have adjusted the drying time in the front-panel menu to speed up the printer output. Set “Drying  
time” to “Automatic”.  
For details of drying time adjustments, see Ink system.  
Marks or scratches on glossy paper after printing  
Glossy paper may be extremely sensitive to the bin or anything that it comes into contact with directly after  
printing. This will depend on the amount of ink printed and the environmental conditions that are present at the  
time of printing. Avoid any contact with the paper and handle the print with care until quite some time has elapsed.  
NOTE:  
Included with HP papers is a book “Printer Tips” that includes a section on troubleshooting  
paper problems.  
           
Smears or scratching on your printed paper  
This problem can appear on paper-based coated paper if a lot of ink is printed quickly. The paper cannot absorb  
the ink quickly enough and becomes distorted. As the printheads move over the paper, the printheads and the  
paper come into contact with each other and the printed image is smeared.  
1. Press the Cancel key on the front panel; if you continue to print, the paper may damage the printheads.  
2. Cancel the print job from your computer application.  
3. In order to obtain better results perform the following:  
• Use HP recommended paper. If the image you are printing has intense color, use HP Heavy Coated Paper.  
• Try to increase the print margins by relocating the image in the page from your software applications.  
If the above fails to solve the problem of smears and scratching, change the paper type you are using to a non-  
paper-based material such as HP Clear Film.  
 
Paper loading problems  
The front panel keeps indicating that paper is misaligned or incorrectly positioned.  
Roll paper  
The roll paper may be loaded the wrong way. The paper should load over the roll towards you, see Loading  
roll paper.  
The paper may be skewed. The right-hand edge must be parallel to the blue line on the front paper deflector.  
Ensure that the paper is wrapped tightly on the roll.  
Check that the paper is correctly loaded onto the spindle, see Installing a new roll on the printer.  
Sheet paper  
The sheet must be loaded with the right-hand edge against the blue line on the printer platen and the front  
edge against the blue line just after the pinch rollers, see Loading sheet paper.  
The paper may be crumpled or warped or may have irregular edges.  
If you are using hand-cut paper, the edges may not form a right angle or they may be rough. Do not use hand-  
cut paper. Use only purchased sheet paper.  
If the paper is curled with the curl up it will be very difficult to load. It is easier to load it with the curl down  
     
Paper output problems  
Prints fall on the floor after being cut  
Make sure the paper bin is open.  
Do not let more than twenty prints accumulate in the bin.  
Make sure roll paper is loaded correctly. If the paper is loaded incorrectly, the natural curl of the paper may  
cause it to miss the bin and fall to the floor.  
Prints do not stack properly in the paper bin  
The printer may be too close to the end of the roll. The natural curl near the end of the roll can cause stacking  
problems. Load a new roll or remove prints manually as they are completed.  
If you are mixing prints or nesting sets of several different sizes, you may have stacking problems because of  
the different sizes of paper in the bin.  
   
Image error  
Image is incomplete  
Details the actions to take when the print is: blank, partial, or has suffered clipping.  
Printed image incorrect  
Explains why the image is:  
-
-
-
-
-
-
In one portion of the printing area  
Unexpectedly rotated  
Mirrored  
Distorted or unintelligible  
Overlaid with another image  
Does not obey Page Format and Rotate commands  
Other sources of information  
Lists others sources of information for image problems.  
 
Image is incomplete  
Output contains only a partial print  
Image is clipped  
Long-axis print is clipped  
Output contains only a partial print  
Did you press Cancel or Form Feed and Cut before all the data was received by the printer?  
If so, you have ended the data transmission and will have to print the page again (you normally don’t need to  
press Form Feed and Cut to unload the print).  
The I/O Setup > I/O Timeout setting may be too short. From the front-panel menu you can increase the  
I/O Timeout setting to a longer period and then send the print again.  
The file may be too large for the printer’s memory.  
Select Send Job as a Bitmap in the driver’s Troubleshooting menu (Services tab). This may slow down print  
speed. Alternatively, you can install extra memory on the HP-GL/2 Accessory Card in your printer, see  
Memory.  
There may be a communications problem between your computer and the printer.  
Check your interface cable.  
Check to make sure that your software settings are correct for your current page size (for example, long-axis  
prints).  
     
Image is clipped  
This normally indicates a discrepancy between the actual printing area on the loaded paper and the printing  
area as understood by your software. For general advice on printing areas and page size, see Printable area.  
Check the actual printing area for the paper size you have loaded (printing area = paper size – margins). For  
paper size and margins, see Printable area.  
Check what your software understands to be the printing area (which it may call “printable area” or “imagable  
area”). For example, some software applications assume standard printing areas that are larger than those  
used in this printer.  
You may have asked to rotate the page from portrait to landscape on paper that is not wide enough, for  
example a D/A1-size page rotated on a D/A1-size roll.  
If necessary, change the printing area in your software.  
The file may be too large for the printer’s memory.  
Select Send Job as a Bitmap in the driver’s Troubleshooting menu (Services tab). This may slow down print  
speed. Alternatively, you can install extra memory on the HP-GL/2 Accessory Card in your printer, see  
Memory.  
Long-axis print is clipped  
Does your software support long-axis prints?  
Have you specified an appropriate paper size in your software?  
There may not be sufficient memory.  
Select Send Job as a Bitmap in the driver’s Troubleshooting menu (Services tab). This may slow down print  
speed. Alternatively, you can install extra memory on the HP-GL/2 Accessory Card in your printer, see  
Memory.  
       
Printed image incorrect  
Image is in one portion of the printing area  
Print is distorted or unintelligible  
One image overlays another on the same sheet  
 
Image is in one portion of the printing area  
Is the page size configured in the software too small?  
Are you sure that your software doesn’t believe the image to be in one quadrant of the page?  
Otherwise, this indicates an incompatibility between the software and the printer:  
Is your software configured for this printer? For general advice, see the Assembly and Set-up Poster. For  
advice specific to your software, see the documentation supplied with the driver.  
Image is unexpectedly rotated  
Check the front-panel Paper > Page format > Rotate setting.  
For an explanation of image rotation, see Rotating an image.  
Print is distorted or unintelligible  
The interface cable between your computer and the printer could be faulty. Try another cable to see if the  
problem is corrected.  
If you have connected your computer to the parallel port on the printer, make sure you are using a genuine HP  
parallel interface cable.  
Depending on the software, drivers and RIPs you are using with your printer, there will be different solutions to  
this problem. Refer to the Vendor’s User Documentation for details.  
One image overlays another on the same sheet  
The I/O Setup / I/O Timeout setting may be too long. From the front-panel menu, decrease the setting and  
print again.  
             
Other sources of information  
If you don’t find the solution to the problem here, other sources of help are:  
The documentation supplied with the driver that you are using to manage the output from your software  
application to the printer.  
   
Other problems  
Communication problems  
Describes typical problems you could encounter with communications between your computer and the  
printer.  
Printer does not print  
Details common causes for the printer failing to print.  
Printer seems too slow  
Lists the reasons why printing may slow down.  
 
Communication problems  
Symptoms are:  
The front-panel display does not show Processing when you are sending a print to the printer.  
Your computer displays an error message when you are trying to print.  
Your computer or printer “hangs” (stays idle) while communication is taking place. However, note that large  
prints can take a correspondingly long time to print.  
Your printed output shows random or inexplicable errors (misplaced lines, partial graphics, etc.).  
How to solve the problem:  
Have you selected the correct printer in your software?  
Does the printer work correctly when printing from other software?  
If the printer is connected to a network, try using it when connected directly to your computer through parallel  
or USB ports.  
If your printer is connected to your computer through any other intermediate devices, such as switch boxes,  
buffer boxes, cable adapters, cable converters, etc., try using it when connected directly to your computer.  
Try another interface cable. For details of supported cables, see Connection specifications.  
File size and memory  
There is no direct relationship between file size on your computer and memory used in the printer to print that file.  
In fact, because of file compression (and general complexity) it is often impossible to estimate how much memory  
will be used. This means that some large prints will work fine, but some smaller prints may not.  
To handle a job that will not print, you can select Send Job as a Bitmap in the driver’s Troubleshooting menu  
(Services tab). This may slow down print speed. Alternatively, you can install extra memory on the HP-GL/2  
Accessory Card in your printer, see Memory.  
   
Printer does not print  
You may have a power problem. If there is no activity at all from the printer, and the power on indicator in the  
power switch on the front of the printer is off, check that the power cable is connected correctly and that there  
is power available at the socket.  
You may have a problem with your application driver. Is your software configured for this printer? For general  
advice, see the Assembly and Set-up Poster. For advice specific to your software, see the documentation  
supplied with the driver.  
The file may be too large for the printer’s memory. This is the case if the front panel displays “Out of memory–  
data was lost”. Look on your computer screen for any error message; some drivers allow you to choose a  
different printing mode and try to send the file again. If necessary, select Send Job as a Bitmap in the driver’s  
Troubleshooting menu (Services tab). This may slow down print speed. Alternatively, you can install extra  
memory on the HP-GL/2 Accessory Card in your printer, see Memory.  
If you continue to have problems, see Getting help.  
   
Printer seems too slow  
Did you specify Best print quality level on the front panel?  
Best quality mode prints take longer to print.  
Did you specify the right paper type when loading the paper? For details of front-panel paper types, see Paper  
types. To find out the printer’s current paper type setting, see Obtaining roll or sheet paper information.  
The printhead may need replacing; see Printhead replacement  
Did you specify a Manual Dry Time in the front panel? Change the dry time to Automatic see Ink system.  
Did you select Send Job as a Bitmap in the driver’s Troubleshooting menu (Services tab)? If so, try turning  
that option off.  
If the printer is in Fast mode and the file it is printing contains high-density inked areas, the printer may need  
to slow down to compensate.  
   
Getting help  
HP Customer Care  
Details about the HP Customer Care program.  
What to do before you call  
Information on what you should do before you contact your local HP Customer Care Center.  
HP Designjet Online  
How to get help and much more via the World Wide Web.  
 
HP Customer Care  
As your strategic support partner, we make it our business to help keep your business running smoothly. HP  
Customer Care offers award-winning support to ensure you get the most from your HP Designjet.  
The contact details for your local HP Customer Care Center are provided in the Hewlett-Packard Customer Care  
booklet supplied with your printer.  
HP Customer Care provides comprehensive, proven support expertise and leverages new technologies to give  
customers unique end-to-end support. Services include setup and installation, troubleshooting tools, warranty  
upgrades, repair and exchange services, phone and Web support, software updates, and self-maintenance  
services.  
To find out more about HP Customer Care, please visit us at: http://www.hp.com/go/support/.  
   
What to do before you call  
1. Review the troubleshooting suggestions in this section:  
In the relevant driver documentation supplied with this printer (for users sending PostScript files or those  
using Microsoft Windows).  
If you have installed third party software drivers and RIPs refer to that user documentation.  
2. If the problem appears to be related to your software application, first contact your software vendor.  
3. If you still have difficulty, refer to the HP Support Services booklet shipped with this printer. This document  
contains a comprehensive list of various support services available to help solve printer problems.  
4. If you do call one of the Hewlett-Packard offices, please have the following information available to help us  
answer your questions more quickly:  
The printer you are using (the product number and the serial number, found on the label at the back of the  
printer).  
The computer you are using.  
Any special equipment or software you are using (for example, spoolers, networks, switch-boxes,  
modems, or special software drivers).  
The cable you are using (by part number) and where you purchased it.  
The type of interface used on your printer (parallel, or network).  
The software name and version you are currently using.  
If the problem is a system error it will have a error number; record the error number and have it ready. See  
Printer does not print.  
 
HP Designjet Online  
Direct access to HP and the information you want, when you need it. Register now!  
http://www.hp.com/go/graphic-arts/  
HP Designjet Online is a free, Web-based “user club” exclusive to HP Designjet users. Having registered, the  
user has unrestricted access to a range of useful services, the emphasis being on “useful”, as this is definitely not  
a sales-oriented site.  
Communication from HP to users includes:  
A quarterly newsletter focusing on usage tips, technical briefings and examples of HP Designjet applications  
around the world  
Full information on worldwide HP Customer Care contacts  
An on-line HP Designjet Diagnosis troubleshooting tool  
A calendar of HP Designjet-related events and programs  
On-line access to training videos and selected user documents  
Immediate information on new products  
Communication from the users to HP includes:  
Feedback on HP Designjet features  
Automatic contact with HP Customer Care from the troubleshooting tool, for HP to follow up  
The chance to ask technical questions on large-format printing to industry experts  
And finally, communication from user to user includes the chance to win prizes by submitting HP Designjet  
success stories, as well as a user-to-user discussion forum where users can share best practices and ask for  
advice from their fellow professionals.  
HP Designjet Online is available in English, German, French, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese.  
 
Front panel  
The printer’s front panel is a user-friendly interface that gives you access to a comprehensive set of printer  
functions. There is also information on your ink consumable items which is continually updated.  
The front panel  
Menu structure  
Navigating the menu system  
Message descriptions  
The front panel  
The panel on the front of your printer is the principal way of changing the behavior of the printer, apart from any  
software driven controls that may be provided through the application in use. The front panel of the printer  
contains the following functional areas:  
Action keys  
Display screen  
Navigation keys  
Depending on your country and printer model, your front panel may include a localization label with text as shown  
above or symbols on the keys. The position of the keys is the same in all cases.  
         
Navigation keys  
The display section of the front panel consists of an LCD display and the following five navigation keys, provided  
to navigate through the menus displayed on the screen:  
The Up  
and  
Down keys let you scroll through the various items in a menu list.  
The Menu key takes you to the main screen. It cancels any choices that have not yet been selected by  
pressing the Enter key.  
The Back key takes you to the previous screen.  
The Enter key selects the item in the menu list and makes it current. If there are sub-selections to be made,  
this key takes you to them; otherwise it takes you back a screen.  
.
Up  
Back  
Menu  
Down  
Enter  
           
Display screen  
The display screen of the front panel shows the main menu (the words displayed may vary).  
NOTE:  
You can always reach the main menu by pressing the Menu key.  
After a short time-out, the display will always revert to the main menu with the Job Management menu active.  
Active menu  
Paper menu icon  
Ink menu icon  
Job Management menu icon (active)  
Setup menu icon  
Information  
message  
The Navigation example is given from the Job Management menu.  
Error  
message  
 
Action keys  
The Cancel key cancels the current printer operation (printing or preparing for printing). It will also cancel the  
current menu selection and return to the main menu if a menu option is highlighted.  
The Form Feed and Cut key causes a sheet to be ejected or the roll to be advanced and cut.  
Cancel  
Form Feed  
and Cut key  
     
Menu structure  
The front panel display area screen shows the four classes of menu options available represented with specific  
icons. Click on the icon to display its menu structure.  
Paper menu  
Ink Menu  
Job Management Menu  
Set-up menu  
   
Paper menu  
Load/Unload Roll  
Load/Unload Sheet  
Select paper type  
Cutter  
Paper  
Bright White Inkjet Paper  
Plain Paper  
On/off  
Size  
Vellum  
Page Format  
Automatic  
Inked area  
ANSI  
Natural Tracing Paper  
Translucent Bond  
Clear film  
Best ANSI A…E  
Best ISO …A0  
ISO  
Matte film  
JIS  
Best JIS …B1  
Coated Paper  
Heavy Coated Paper  
High-Gloss Photo  
Poster Paper  
ARCH  
Best ARCH …E1  
Over A2, Over A1  
100cm ×140cm, …  
Oversize  
Extra  
Rotate  
0, 90, 180, 270  
On/off  
Canvas  
Mirroring  
Small margins  
On/off  
Advance Calibration  
Create pattern  
Measure pattern  
Restore factory  
Menu item depends on the  
type of paper loaded  
Items always shown  
Shown only if paper is loaded  
   
Ink menu  
Ink  
Information  
Ink Cartridges  
Printheads  
Status  
Ink Levels  
Cyan Printhead  
Cyan Ink Cartridge  
Color calibration  
Troubleshooting  
Magenta Printhead  
Magenta Ink Cartridge  
Calibrate Paper  
Yellow Printhead  
Black Printhead  
Yellow Ink Cartridge  
Black Ink Cartridge  
Reset  
Align Printheads  
Standard (4.5 min.)  
Replace Printheads  
Special (11 min.)  
Replace Ink Cartridges  
Color settings  
Color/monochrome  
RGB  
Color  
Native  
Grayscale  
True Black  
sRGB  
Rendering Intent  
Perceptual  
Saturation  
Colorimetric  
Drying time  
Automatic  
None  
1, 2 … , 99 min.  
Manual  
   
Job Management menu  
The HP-GL/2 Accessory Card provides a Reprint menu.  
   
Set-up menu  
Help  
Print quality  
Best  
Normal  
Fast  
Advanced Options  
Optimize for  
Line drawings / text  
Images  
Default  
Best Quality Settings  
Fast Quality Settings  
Maximum detail  
Default  
Model number, Serial number, Service ID,  
Firmware rev, Accessory rev, Paper used,  
Ink used (c, m, y, k), Scan axis usage,  
Paper axis usage, Service station usage,  
Spittoon usage, Pinch-lift usage, Cutter  
usage, Ink usage.  
Increased speed  
View  
Print  
Printer Information  
HPGL/2 settings  
Palette  
Software, Factory, Palette A, B  
Palette A, Palette B  
Factory  
Define Palette  
Pen no. 0 … 15  
Pen no. 0 … 15  
Width  
Color  
0.13 … 12.0mm  
0 … 256  
Merge  
On/Off  
More menu options  
   
Set-up menu (continued)  
Previous menu options  
I/O setup  
Card ID  
No I/O Cards present / Contents provided by card  
No I/O Cards present  
Card setup  
Configuration  
Reset Card  
Advanced  
I/O Timeout  
30 sec, … , 30 min  
Front Panel  
Language  
Buzzer  
English, German, Spanish, French, Italian,  
Japenese, Portuguese, Korean, Chinese,  
Taiwanese, …  
ON/OFF  
Contrast  
0%, 5%, … , 100%  
0-1000m  
Altitude  
Log  
1000m - 2000m  
Printheads  
>2000m  
Errors  
Service tools  
Service tests  
Service calibrations  
Service utilities  
Hidden items that can only be accessed  
from the Set-up menu through a  
certain combination of keys  
Items always shown  
 
Navigating the menu system  
From the top level of the menu system, you can navigate through the menus using the display keys. Any menu  
item followed by a greater-than symbol (>), indicates that a further level of menu items is available.  
Press Menu to return to the top level  
without changing any menu selections.  
This will bring you to the four menu icons.  
Press Back to return to the previous menu  
level without changing any menu selections.  
Press Enter to:  
Press the Up  
and Down  
keys to scroll  
Select a menu and move to the next menu level.  
Change the value of the selected menu item.  
up and down though the menus or menu  
options.  
See Navigation example for a brief overview of the menu system.  
     
Navigation example  
This section provides a typical example of how to navigate through the menus to configure a specific print option.  
How to set the ink-drying time to two minutes  
The front panel menu structure diagram for the Ink menu shows that the path to the Drying time option is:  
Ink menu  
Drying time  
Use the following procedure to set the ink-drying time to two minutes.  
Setting drying time navigation example  
Key action  
Display  
Result  
The Ink menu icon is  
1. Use the Up  
and  
highlighted to allow you to  
select the Ink menu options.  
Down  
keys to high-  
light the Ink menu icon.  
2. Press the Enter key to  
enter the printer Ink  
menu.  
The display shows the Ink  
menu to allow you to select  
drying time.  
Continued …  
       
Setting drying time navigation example  
Display  
Key action  
3. Use the Up and  
Down keys to  
Result  
The display shows the Drying  
time option highlighted.  
highlight the Drying  
time menu option.  
4. Press the Enter key to  
enter the Drying time  
menu.  
The display shows the Drying  
time menu to allow you to  
select the type of drying time  
you require.  
The display shows the  
Manual option highlighted.  
5. Use the Up  
and  
Down keys to  
highlight the Manual  
menu option.  
6. Press the Enter key to  
enter the Manual drying  
time setting menu.  
The display shows the  
Manual drying time setting  
menu to allow you to select  
the drying time you require.  
Previous …  
Continued …  
 
Setting drying time navigation example  
Display  
Key action  
7. Press the Up  
Result  
The display shows the  
Manual drying time setting  
menu with two minutes  
selected.  
key  
once to select two  
minutes.  
8. Press the Enter key to  
set the drying time to two  
minutes.  
If the front-panel buzzer is set  
ON, there will be a short  
beep’ to confirm the change.  
A tick mark () in the right side  
of the field confirms the value.  
9. Press the Top key to  
return to the top level  
menu.  
The display shows the Ink  
menu.  
Previous …  
 
Message descriptions  
This is a list of the error messages in the front-panel display. If an action is needed, it is shown in italics in the  
Explanation and action column. The messages are listed in alphabetical order. Other front-panel messages,  
such as prompts, are included in the descriptions of the relevant procedures elsewhere in this document.  
Front-panel messages  
Message  
Explanation and action  
Alignment error due to  
printheads.  
Press ENTER to see faulty  
printheads  
The printer was aligning its printheads, but encountered an error  
due to some printheads not printing properly. Alignment has  
stopped.  
Press the Enter key.  
Alignment error  
Press ENTER to continue  
The printer was aligning its printheads, but encountered an error.  
Alignment has stopped.  
Press the Enter key.  
Cartridges will expire in days:  
nn  
One or more of the cartridges are about to expire. nn is the number  
of days until expiry date of the cartridge that will expire first. The  
cartridges that are about to expire are indicated below this message.  
For an explanation of the replacement procedure, see Ink cartridge  
replacement.  
Color calibration error  
Press ENTER to continue  
The printer was performing a calibration of its color system, but  
encountered an error.  
Press the Enter key.  
   
Front-panel messages  
Explanation and action  
Message  
Error  
The printer has detected that one or more of the printheads is  
missing or has an error, as indicated by flashing crosses. The four  
icons refer from left to right to the Cyan (), Black (), Magenta ()  
and Yellow () printheads.  
Select Replace Printheads  
For an explanation of the replacement procedure, see Printhead  
replacement.  
HP is not responsible for  
damage from use of non-HP  
ink.  
The printer has determined that one or more of the ink cartridges is  
not an HP product. Your product warranty applies only when you  
use HP ink. Any damage caused to your printer resulting from the  
use of non-HP ink cartridges is not the responsibility of Hewlett-  
Packard.  
Replace  
Continue  
If you want to replace the non-HP ink cartridges, select Replace and  
press the Enter key. Otherwise, select Continue and press Enter to  
continue.  
HP is not responsible for  
damage from use of non-HP  
printheads.  
The printer has determined that one or more of the printheads is not  
an HP product. Your product warranty applies only when you use  
HP printheads. Any damage caused to your printer resulting from  
the use of non-HP printheads is not the responsibility of Hewlett-  
Packard.  
Replace  
Continue  
If you want to replace the non-HP printheads, select Replace and  
press the Enter key. Otherwise, select Continue and press Enter to  
continue.  
Front-panel messages  
Explanation and action  
Message  
Ink cartridge replacement  
required  
The printer has detected that one or more of the ink cartridges is  
missing or has an error, as indicated by flashing crosses. The four  
icons refer from left to right to the Cyan (), Black (), Magenta ()  
and Yellow () cartridges.  
For an explanation of the icons and details of the replacement  
procedure, see Ink cartridges.  
INK CARTRIDGES need to be You have attempted to replace printheads, but the printer has  
functional.  
Replace before replacing  
printheads  
detected that there are ink cartridges that are wrong. The ink  
cartridges must be replaced before the printheads can be replaced.  
First replace the faulty, empty or missing ink cartridges and then  
replace the printheads. See Ink cartridge replacement and  
Printhead replacement.  
Install missing cartridges and  
replace empty cartridges  
before replacing printheads  
You are replacing printheads, but the printer has detected that some  
cartridges are empty and some are missing. The empty cartridges  
must be replaced and the missing ones inserted before the  
printheads are replaced.  
Follow the procedure for Ink cartridge replacement. Press the Enter or  
Cancel key to continue.  
Install missing cartridges  
before replacing printheads  
You are replacing printheads, but the printer has detected that one  
or more cartridges are missing. The missing cartridges must be  
installed before the printheads are replaced.  
Follow the procedure for Printhead replacement. Press the Enter or  
Cancel key to continue.  
Front-panel messages  
Explanation and action  
Message  
Open window and check  
printhead cover is properly  
closed  
You have replaced one or more printheads and the printer’s check  
has found that the printhead cover is not securely closed.  
Open the window and check the printhead cover. The procedure is  
described in the Printhead replacement procedure.  
Note: This message may also appear following a paper jam, as the  
printer cannot detect the exact reason for the problem. In this case  
you may have to resort to powering off the printer or even removing  
the power cable from the machine, in order to recover from the  
problem. See Clearing a paper jam.  
Open window and check  
proper installation of setup  
printheads  
During system start-up, which occurs when you first install the  
printer, you need to install the setup printheads. These special  
printheads cannot be used for printing, but must be used when the  
printer has been powered off. The printer has detected that the  
setup printheads have not been installed correctly.  
Open the window and follow subsequent instructions to reinstall or  
relocate the setup printheads. Contact HP for advice if the setup  
printheads are missing or cannot be installed correctly.  
Option not available now  
Out of paper  
You have selected an option in the menu that is not available at the  
moment. (The printer may be busy, out of ink, out of paper, etc.)  
The printer ran out of paper while printing the calibration pattern.  
Load a sheet or roll that is at least 65 cm (25 in) long and 50 cm  
(20 in) wide.  
Front-panel messages  
Explanation and action  
Message  
Paper advance calibration is  
recommended.  
You are recommended to perform the Advance calibration routine,  
to ensure the optimum print quality.  
Press ENTER to calibrate  
Press the Enter key to create the calibration pattern. See Advance  
calibration.  
Paper advance calibration is  
recommended. Load paper  
and select Paper advance  
calibration.  
You are recommended to perform the Advance calibration routine,  
to ensure optimum print quality.  
Load a sheet or roll of paper and then select Advance calibration  
from the Paper menu. See Advance calibration.  
Press ENTER to finish  
Paper loaded with too much  
skew  
Press ENTER to retry  
Press CANCEL to abort  
During the loading of paper, the printer has detected that the paper  
is skewed too much; that is, it has not been loaded straight enough.  
(‘Skew’ is the angle between the actual paper edge and the correct  
line.)  
Either: Press the Enter key to restart the loading procedure;  
Or: Press the Cancel key to cancel paper loading.  
Paper mispositioned  
The paper is not properly positioned in the printer. Either it is out of  
the load line margins or it has moved too much from its previous  
position.  
Reload the paper following the normal procedure, to solve this  
problem. See Loading roll paper and Loading sheet paper.  
Paper not found  
Press ENTER to retry  
Press CANCEL to abort  
During the loading of paper, the printer has detected that no paper  
has been loaded.  
Either: Press the Enter key to restart the loading procedure;  
Or: Press the Cancel key to cancel paper loading.  
Front-panel messages  
Explanation and action  
Message  
Paper not present.  
Load paper to print calibration  
pattern  
The paper axis calibration routine has been triggered without having  
paper loaded.  
Load paper; see Advance calibration for details of the routine.  
Paper too big to scan the  
pattern after printing it  
During paper loading for the Calibration routine, the printer has  
detected that it will not be able to load the paper when it will be  
needed for scanning. The minimum size required for the print is  
65 cm (25 in) long and 50 cm (20 in) wide.  
Load a smaller sheet that satisfies this minimum requirement.  
Paper too big  
While loading paper into the printer (roll or sheet), the printer has  
Press ENTER to retry  
Press CANCEL to abort  
found that it is either too wide or too long (sheet only) to be loaded  
properly.  
Press the Enter key to load smaller paper, or the Cancel key to stop  
the load.  
Paper too small for a  
diagnostic print  
The Troubleshooting utility has found that the single sheet loaded in  
the printer is too small for a Diagnostic Print.  
Load a roll of paper, or a sheet that is A3 size or larger.  
Paper too small  
to align printheads  
Load bigger size to  
align  
The paper loaded is not big enough to contain the alignment pattern.  
Unload the paper (select Unload roll or Unload sheet from the  
Paper menu) and then load paper that is large enough—at least A4/  
Letter-size in landscape mode for Standard alignment, or A3/B size  
in landscape mode for Special alignment.  
Press ENTER to continue  
Front-panel messages  
Explanation and action  
Message  
Paper too small to print the  
pattern  
The paper loaded is not big enough to contain the paper axis  
calibration pattern.  
Load a roll or sheet that is at least 65 cm (25 in) long and 50 cm  
(20 in) wide.  
Paper too small  
Press ENTER to retry  
Press CANCEL to abort  
While loading paper into the printer (roll or sheet), the printer has  
found that it is either too narrow or too short (sheet only) to be  
loaded properly.  
Press the Enter key to load larger paper, or the Cancel key to stop  
the load process.  
Paper type not valid  
to align printheads  
Change paper type to  
align  
You have requested the printer to align paper but it has detected  
that the paper loaded is not the right type to use to align the  
printheads. The paper loaded is not big enough to contain the  
alignment pattern.  
Press ENTER to continue  
Unload the paper (select Unload roll or Unload sheet from the  
Paper menu) and then load paper that is the right type for the  
alignment. See Printhead alignment.  
Pattern not found  
Reload it again, please  
The printer is trying to perform a scan of the calibration pattern, but  
the pattern was not found.  
Reload the sheet that was printed by the Create pattern part of the  
calibration routine.  
Front-panel messages  
Explanation and action  
Message  
Possibly a paper jam  
1. Open window  
There may be paper jammed in the printer. (The printer has  
detected that a motor is blocked and the likely cause is a paper jam;  
however, it may be due to some other cause.)  
Follow these steps to check the paper path, as described in Clearing  
a paper jam. When the jammed paper has been cleared, you are  
strongly recommended to align the printheads, as they are quite  
likely to have become misaligned as a result of the paper jam.  
2. Switch power off  
3. Clear paper path  
4. Switch power on  
5. Align printheads  
Printhead replacement not  
available now. Cancel print  
jobs before replacement  
You have requested the printer to replace one or more printheads,  
but the printer is busy printing a job and cannot honor the request  
now.  
Either: press the Cancel key to cancel the job that is currently  
printing, and then again select Replace Printheads (from the Ink  
system menu).  
Or: wait until the job has finished printing (and there are no more  
jobs in the print queue), and then again select Replace Printheads  
(from the Ink system menu).  
Printhead warning  
Poor print quality  
A problem has occurred with one or more printheads. The  
printheads are still functional. The problem was detected either  
during printhead alignment or during troubleshooting. If you have  
completed the routine, the system was unable to clean the  
printheads fully.  
You should use the Troubleshooting procedure to correct any print  
quality problems that may be apparent; alternatively, you should  
replace the printheads (see Printhead replacement).  
Front-panel messages  
Explanation and action  
Message  
Printheads not aligned  
Paper type not valid  
to align printheads  
You have replaced one or more printheads but the printer has  
detected that you do not have the right type of paper loaded for the  
alignment process.  
Press ENTER to continue  
Press the Enter key to load the correct type of paper, or the Cancel  
key to stop the load process.  
Printheads not aligned  
Paper too small  
to align printheads  
You have replaced one or more printheads but the printer has  
detected that you do not have wide enough paper loaded for the  
alignment process.  
Press ENTER to continue  
Press the Enter key to load larger paper, or the Cancel key to stop  
the load process.  
PRINTHEADS not functional  
Replace printheads  
Cancel print  
The printer is attempting to print a job, but finds that there is a  
problem with the printheads. You may either replace the printheads  
at this stage or cancel the print.  
Select the required option and press the Enter key. If you decide to  
replace them, you will be told which ones are failing or missing.  
Printheads require alignment.  
Load paper and select Align  
printheads.  
The printer has detected that the printheads need to be aligned.  
Press the Enter key to continue. Load a sheet or roll of paper, and  
select Align printheads from the Ink menu. See Printhead  
alignment.  
Press ENTER to finish  
Printheads require alignment.  
Press ENTER to align  
The printer has detected that the printheads need to be aligned.  
Press the Enter key to align them. See Printhead alignment.  
Front-panel messages  
Explanation and action  
Message  
Problem found during  
calibration  
A general problem was found during the Advance calibration  
routine.  
Respond to any other messages that appear on the front panel,  
indicating ink or paper problems, and then retry the Advance  
calibration routine.  
Problems detected in INK  
CARTRIDGES.  
There is an error with the ink cartridges during the preparation of the  
ink system.  
Continue process and replace  
them.  
Press the Enter key and then follow the instructions to replace the  
faulty ink cartridges.  
Press ENTER to continue  
Reload paper  
There is an error in the paper, as shown in another message.  
Use the normal procedure to reload the paper.  
Replace empty cartridges  
before replacing printheads  
You have requested the printer to permit printhead replacement, but  
the printer has detected that one or more cartridges are empty. The  
empty cartridges must be replaced before the printheads are  
replaced.  
Press the Enter key and follow the procedure for replacing empty  
cartridges, described in Ink cartridge replacement.  
Right edge of roll too far from  
load line  
The paper is out of the load line margins—too far from the line  
where it should be loaded.  
Press ENTER to retry  
Press CANCEL to abort  
Either: Press the Enter key to restart the loading procedure;  
Or: Press the Cancel key to cancel paper loading.  
Front-panel messages  
Explanation and action  
Message  
Right edge of sheet too far  
from load line  
Press ENTER to retry  
Press CANCEL to abort  
During the loading of a sheet of paper, the printer has detected that  
the paper is too far to the left; it should be aligned close to the blue  
line painted on the right side of the platen.  
Either: Press the Enter key to restart the loading procedure;  
Or: Press the Cancel key to cancel paper loading.  
Roll edge not found  
Please check roll edges are  
non-clear  
During the loading of a roll, the printer cannot detect the side edge  
of the paper. A possible cause is that the paper is transparent  
(clear); only opaque paper types are supported.  
Press ENTER to retry  
Press CANCEL to abort  
Either: Press the Enter key to restart the loading procedure;  
Or: Press the Cancel key to cancel paper loading.  
Roll right edge too far from  
load line  
Press ENTER to retry  
Press CANCEL to abort  
During the loading of a roll of paper, the printer has detected that the  
paper is too far to the left; it should be aligned with the blue line  
painted on the right side of the platen.  
Either: Press the Enter key to restart the loading procedure;  
Or: Press the Cancel key to cancel paper loading.  
Sheet edge not found  
During the loading of a sheet, the printer cannot detect the side  
Please check sheet edges are edge of the paper. A possible cause is that the paper is transparent  
non-clear  
(clear); only opaque paper types are supported.  
Press ENTER to retry  
Press CANCEL to abort  
Either: Press the Enter key to restart the loading procedure;  
Or: Press the Cancel key to cancel paper loading.  
Sheet not loaded  
Load sheet with printed  
pattern  
The printer is trying to perform a scan of the calibration pattern, but  
no sheet was found.  
Load the sheet that was printed by the Create pattern part of the  
calibration routine.  
Front-panel messages  
Explanation and action  
Message  
Sheet too long  
Please check it is not a roll  
Press ENTER to retry  
You have requested the printer to load a sheet of paper, but the  
sheet appears to be too long.  
Check that the paper is not a roll.  
Press CANCEL to abort  
Either: Press the Enter key to try to load the sheet again;  
Or: Press the Cancel key to stop the process. If the paper is on a  
roll, follow the instructions in Loading roll paper.  
Troubleshooting finished  
Resume normal printing  
If problem persists select  
Troubleshooting again  
Press ENTER to continue  
The printer has finished the Troubleshooting routine and will not at  
this stage perform further cleaning on the printheads because this  
could damage the other ones. However, according to the evaluation  
you have given, the printheads require cleaning because there are  
defects in the Diagnostic Print.  
Press the Enter key. Then resume your normal printing activities. If  
the problem recurs, try using the Troubleshooting routine again, or  
select Replace Printheads from the front panel (in the Ink System  
menu) to replace the printheads that are faulty.  
Troubleshooting requires  
paper for a diagnostic print.  
The Troubleshooting utility has found that there is no paper loaded  
in the printer.  
Load a roll of paper.  
Unable to initialize ink system. The system cannot successfully complete ink system start-up.  
Call HP representative. Call HP for service.  
Unable to prepare ink system. During ink system start-up, the purge of the ink system has failed  
Open window to check  
SETUP printheads  
and the system is asking you if the preparation has completed.  
Check the setup printheads and then follow the instructions in the  
front panel and respond to further questions.  
Front-panel messages  
Explanation and action  
Message  
Unknown ink cartridges.  
Press ENTER to continue.  
The ink cartridges are not recognized by the printer as HP-  
approved, and there is at least one that is new.  
Press the Enter key.  
Unknown paper format  
Reload paper  
The format (roll or sheet) of the paper loaded in the printer is  
unknown.  
Reload the paper following the normal procedure, to solve this  
problem. See Loading roll paper or Loading sheet paper.  
Unknown paper type  
Select paper type  
The type of the paper loaded in the printer is unknown to the printer.  
Select a known paper type from the printer menu.  
Unknown printheads.  
Press ENTER to continue.  
The printheads are not recognized by the printer as HP-approved,  
although the printer can still use them.  
Press the Enter key.  
Front-panel messages (continued)  
Explanation and Action  
Message  
Warning!  
The color calibrations for the paper that is loaded have been lost.  
Machine calibrations need to  
be performed. Refer to guide  
for instructions.  
Follow the procedure described in Advance calibration.  
Warning: color calibration not  
done on this paper type  
The printer has detected that this paper type has not been color-  
calibrated, and the system is configured to do it.  
To calibrate color for the current paper type, select Ink menu →  
Color calibration Calibrate paper.  
Warning: printheads not  
aligned  
The printer has detected that the printheads have not been aligned  
since the last replacement.  
You should align the printheads by selecting Align printheads from  
the Ink menu.  
Printer options  
The printer has many options that you can use to ensure that the image you print has the look and appearance  
you want. You can select printer settings either from the front panel or from the printer driver. In most cases the  
driver settings override the front panel settings.  
This chapter contains the following topics:  
Page format deals with the formatting of the image and how to use the settings to obtain the formatting that  
you want. It also explains how to control the orientation of the image on the paper.  
Setting page size from the front panel explains how to set the page size from the front panel.  
Image appearance describes how to control the overall appearance of your prints.  
Print management describes how to manage your printing efficiently.  
Printer configuration details how to set specific configuration parameters of your printer.  
Page format  
Page description explains how to make sure the you obtain the prints from your printer in the format you  
want.  
Rotating an image details on how to rotate the image.  
Printing a mirror image explains how to print a mirror image of your print.  
   
Page description  
This section explains how to make sure that the printer produces your print in the page format you want.  
Leading edge  
5 mm  
(0.2 in)  
Margins  
17 mm  
(0.7 in)  
Page size  
Direction of paper  
leaving the printer  
Printing area  
17 mm  
(0.7 in)  
Inked area  
5 mm  
(0.2 in)  
Trailing edge  
   
Page size  
Page size can be specified from the front panel or in the software, where it may be called “Page Size”, “Media  
Size”, “Paper Size”, etc., and where the options include, for example, ISO A3, ANSI Letter, Custom. If your  
software does not define the page size in the print file, the front-panel setting is used. Otherwise, the software  
setting overrides the front-panel setting.  
Margins  
The margins are set to ensure the maximum printable area on your paper. The two side margins are 5.0 mm. The  
margin settings for the leading and trailing edges are 17 mm.  
However, if you are using roll paper and you select small margins, the margins are 5 mm on all four sides.  
Printing area  
The printing area is the page size minus the margins. For a table showing the printing areas for standard paper  
sizes, see Printable area.  
Inked area  
inked area is the smallest rectangle that contains the entire image.  
                 
Rotating an image  
These topics detail all aspects of job rotation:  
Job rotation (HP-GL/2)  
Page size and rotation  
What is rotated?  
Job rotation (HP-GL/2)  
If the software in the driver does not specify the rotation setting, it can be specified in the front panel  
(Paper > Page Format > Rotate).  
Page size and rotation  
Note that, when you rotate a job, the page size is enlarged to avoid clipping, because the trailing and leading  
margins are not the same size as the side margins.  
           
What is rotated?  
With roll paper, both the image and the page orientation are rotated.  
0º  
90º  
A
Notice that the narrow margins are always at the left and right sides, regardless of the orientation. The page size  
is adjusted to maintain the printing area, preventing clipping.  
With sheet paper, the image is rotated, but the page orientation specified in your software is retained. (You should  
always load sheet paper in the orientation you have specified in the software.)  
90º  
0º  
A
   
Printing a mirror image  
If you are using clear imaging paper, sometimes called ‘backlit’, you may want to print a mirror image of your print,  
so that when the paper is lit from behind it is in the correct orientation. This can be done from the front panel,  
without changing the image in your software.  
Mirror Off  
Mirror On  
   
Setting page size from the front panel  
Adjusting the page size from the front panel  
Details how and why you would adjust the page size from the front panel.  
Page size  
Describes the various methods of controlling the page size.  
Page size and clipped images  
Explains what happens if you choose a larger page size than the current paper loaded in your printer.  
 
Adjusting the page size from the front panel  
You do not normally need to adjust the page size through the front panel, because the page size you have  
selected in your HP driver overrides the page size selected in the printer. However, some of the circumstances in  
which you may want to change the default setting are:  
When you want to save paper by printing only the inked area of your print, plus the margins. In this case set  
Page Format > Size > Inked area.  
Depending on the driver you are using, you may not need to change the page size in the front panel. The default  
Size setting (Software) in the Page Format menu causes the printer to look for the page size information in the print  
file: if it is there, the printer uses it.  
However, some of the circumstances in which you may want to change the default setting are:  
If you want to print the inked area only, but the driver you are using does not specify “Inked area”.  
In this case, set the Size setting in the Page Format menu to Inked area.  
If you can select Inked area from your driver, any selection you have made in the front-panel menu will be  
overridden by the settings in the driver.  
When the prints you are creating need to be of a specific standard (for example, ISO or ANSI), but the actual  
size within that standard is not important. For example, your page size may need to conform to a standard  
ISO page size, but it does not matter whether the final page size is ISO A4 or ISO A3.  
In this case, set Page Format > Size to ISO > Best... or ANSI > Best... etc. The printer uses the smallest standard  
size into which the inked area will fit.  
     
Page size  
The Page Size option lets you select the page size of your print. The options are described in the following table. If  
you need to adjust the page size from the front panel, do so before sending the file from your computer. The  
printer determines the size of a print at the time it is received from your application.  
NOTE:  
Settings will be overridden by your driver or application.  
Page format  
Inked Area  
Available sizes  
The printed page size is the Inked area plus margins.  
Automatic  
The printer looks to the print you have sent for a page size instruction. If  
it is present the printer uses this. If not, the printed page size is the  
inked area plus margins.  
Besta ISO A, ISO A0/A1/A2/A3/A4  
ISO  
Besta ANSI, ANSI E/D/C/B/A  
ANSI  
JIS  
The printed page size is exactly  
Besta JIS B, JIS B1/B2/B3/B4  
the size you specify. The largest  
discrete page size you can specify  
is E/A0  
Besta ARCH, ARCH E1/E/D/C/B/A  
ARCH  
Oversize  
Extra  
Over A1/A2  
100 cm x 140 cm, 42 in x 59 in  
a. The printer chooses the smallest page size from the corresponding discrete options  
that will hold the inked area of the print. For example, if Best ISO A is selected and the  
inked area of the print is between A3 and A4,the printer chooses A3 as the page size.  
   
Page size and clipped images  
If you specify in your software a page size that is larger than the paper size loaded in the printer, the printer will  
still print what it can, but may clip your image.  
A2 paper in printer  
Clipped  
area  
A1 page size in software or front panel  
   
Image appearance  
These topics explain how you can control the overall appearance of your prints.  
Front panel image options  
explains how to change the HP-GL/2 color palettes.  
Printing images in grayscale  
describes how to print color images in grayscale.  
Print speeds and print quality  
lists typical printing times by output quality.  
Print quality  
describes the different print modes that are available with your printer.  
Advanced options  
describes the various optimization and quality enhancement methods available.  
     
Front panel image options  
These topics deal with the ways you can control the overall appearance of your prints from the front panel in  
terms of:  
Pen widths and colors in the internal palettes  
Changing the treatment of overlapping lines (merge)  
Some front-panel selections affect the next file you send from your computer, not pages already in the printer’s  
queue. If this is the case, it is stated in the relevant topic.  
Some of the controls are available using the front-panel menus (for example) pen width, pen color, overlapping  
lines). Print mode options are controlled from the front-panel.  
Why use the front panel?  
By default, the printer looks to your software to provide information on all the above attributes. However, your  
driver or application may not provide these controls or you may want to experiment with various effects, or try a  
temporary change, without the need to change your images or your driver settings.  
Some of these settings do not affect the output generated when printing from most of the applications under  
Windows when using a HP-GL/2 driver.  
 
Pen widths and colors in the internal palettes  
The “pens” discussed throughout these topics are the conceptual pens in a software palette, rather than the  
printer’s physical printheads.  
The printer has three pen palettes:  
Factory  
Palette A  
Palette B  
The factory palette cannot be changed. You can, however, change the line width and color settings for each pen  
in the remaining two palettes (palette A and palette B). Initially, all three palettes are identical. Each palette has 16  
pens which can include pens of different widths and any combination of the printer’s predefined 256 colors.  
Related information  
To select a palette  
Change the palette settings  
How to define Palette A  
       
To select a palette  
To select a palette through the front-panel menu, go to the Define Palette selection under HP-GL/2 Settings and  
choose the palette you want. See Set-up menu.  
The following table describes the palette choices.  
Palette  
Comments  
Software  
Palette A  
The printer looks to your software for pen settings and ignores all three internal palettes.  
The printer assigns the attributes defined in Palette A to the pens defined in your software  
as 0 through 15.  
Palette B  
Factory  
The printer assigns the attributes defined in Palette B to the pens defined in your software  
as 0 through 15.  
The printer assigns the attributes defined in the Factory Palette to the pens defined in your  
software as 0 through 15.  
   
Change the palette settings  
You cannot change the Factory palette, but you can define Palettes A and B to be whatever you choose. The  
defaults are Palette, width:  
Item  
Available options  
Defaults  
Palettes  
Pens  
Factory, A, B.  
0 through 15.  
Factory  
Widths (mm) 0.13, 0.18, 0.25, 0.35, 0.50, 0.65, 0.70, 0.80, 0.90, 1.00, 0.13 mm  
1.40, 2.00, 3.00, 5.00, 8.00, 12.00.  
Note that 0.13 mm is a one-pixel line width at 300 dpi  
and three-pixels line width at 600 dpi.  
Colors  
0 through 255.  
As specified on the Palette  
Print.  
How to define Palette A  
 
How to define Palette A  
The following steps explain how to define Palette A.  
Instructions  
1.  
Then press:  
Select (using the keys)  
Set-up menu  
HP-GL/2  
Enter  
Enter  
Enter  
Enter  
Enter  
2.  
Select Palette A  
3.  
Define palette  
Palette A  
4.  
5. Select pen to change (in this example 3). Pen 3  
6. The current width assigned to this pen is  
Width = 0.13mm  
0.35mm  
Enter  
displayed, for example Width=0.13mm.  
7.  
8.  
Scroll to the width you want.  
Enter > Back  
Scroll to Color. The current color  
assigned to the pen is displayed (in this Color = 4  
Enter  
example 4)  
9.  
10.  
Scroll to the color you want.  
Color = 110  
Pen 3  
Enter > Back  
Top  
If both width and color are correct (for  
Pen 3), press Back four times  
Repeat this procedure to define each of the other pens.  
NOTE:  
The palette you have just defined will take effect only when you select it to be the current  
palette, as explained in To select a palette.  
 
Changing the treatment of overlapping lines (merge)  
The Merge setting controls the overlapping lines in an image. There are two settings, Off and On. The following  
illustration shows the effect of each setting.  
Merge off (Default)  
A subsequent line hides a  
previous line where they  
overlap.  
Merge on  
Overlapping lines and area  
fills are merged.  
You can set the merge setting from your software in some applications. Settings in your software override the  
front-panel settings.  
   
Printing images in grayscale  
There are times when you may want to print a color image in grayscale because it is faster. Examples of this are:  
You want a draft where color is not important, for example to check that the image is not going to be clipped.  
You want a version for photocopying in black and white.  
When you choose the Ink menu Color settings > Grayscale option, the printer renders colors as gray scales. If you  
want to use only black ink to print in grayscale, you should select the Ink menu Color settings > True black option.  
 
Print speeds and print quality  
The following table lists some typical printing times (line drawings @ 20-25ºC and 30-60% relative humidity).  
Typical printing times (continued)  
ANSI-D size  
Time (s)  
ANSI-E size  
Time (s)  
Paper  
Color/grayscale  
Quality  
Bright White  
Color  
Best  
Normal  
Draft  
235  
120  
45  
440  
225  
85  
Grayscale  
Color  
Best  
135  
80  
250  
150  
80  
Normal  
Draft  
45  
Coated  
Paper  
Best  
490  
980  
Normal  
Draft  
120  
85  
225  
160  
625  
250  
80  
Grayscale  
Best  
325  
135  
45  
Normal  
Draft  
More Printing Times  
   
Typical printing times (continued)  
ANSI-D size  
ANSI-E size  
Time (s)  
Paper  
Color/grayscale  
Quality  
Time (s)  
Heavy  
Coated  
Paper  
Color  
Best  
Normal  
Draft  
490  
120  
85  
980  
225  
160  
870  
250  
80  
Grayscale  
Color  
Best  
435  
135  
45  
Normal  
Draft  
Glossy Paper  
Best  
630  
435  
325  
630  
435  
325  
1200  
830  
620  
1200  
830  
620  
Normal  
Draft  
Grayscale  
Best  
Normal  
Draft  
 
Print quality  
You can set the overall print quality from the front panel (Set-Up > Print Quality).  
In general choose:  
Fast for maximum productivity. Ideal for checking prints, when print quality is not very important. You can  
increase print speed further with the Fast quality settings.  
Normal to get a good combination of print quality and productivity. Ideal for line drawings with good print  
quality and speed.  
Best to get high print quality. You can increase the resolution of the Best setting with the Best quality settings.  
You can print images in different settings to see which gives the best combination of throughput and quality for  
your application.  
See Print resolution for information on what resolution is used with each print quality setting.  
   
Advanced options  
Your printer provides several advanced optimization and quality enhancement features to allow you to obtain the  
printed results you require.  
Improving line quality and graphics details  
Best quality settings  
Fast quality settings  
   
Improving line quality and graphics details  
The Set-up menu Optimize for option allows you to select the correct mode for the type of job you are printing.  
Two modes are provided: Line drawings/text and Images.  
Selecting the Line drawings/text option smooths the fine graduations along the angles and curves of the printed  
image to refine overall print quality. This enhancement produces:  
Crisper lines  
Finer detail  
Line drawings with a ‘sharp’ appearance  
The Line drawings/text option affects only prints that have color content.  
Selecting Line drawings/text (the default setting) ensures you will always get the best quality color prints, except  
when printing the following files:  
Mixed lines and scanned color images  
Mixed lines and color photographs  
For these files it is recommended that you select Optimize for > Images.  
 
Best quality settings  
If you have selected the Best option as the Print quality setting for your print session but require an even higher  
resolution for your print job, you will need to change the Best quality setting.  
The Best print quality option provides 600×600 dpi resolution in normal mode and 2400×1200 dpi in maximum  
detail mode.  
NOTE:  
Using the maximum detail mode will improve resolution but will reduce printing speed and  
increase memory requirements.  
Use the following procedure to select maximum detail mode:  
Select (using the keys)  
Then press:  
1. Set-up menu  
Enter  
Enter  
Enter  
Enter  
2. Advanced options  
3. Best Quality Settings  
4. Maximum detail  
 
Fast quality settings  
If you have selected the Fast option as the Print quality setting for your print session, you can increase the printing  
speed further by selecting the increased speed mode. This can be done from the front panel only, because it is  
not available as an option in the printer driver.  
Use the following procedure to select increased speed mode:  
Then press:  
Select (using the keys)  
1. Set-up menu  
Enter  
Enter  
Enter  
Enter  
2. Advanced options  
3. Fast Quality Settings  
4. Increased speed  
 
Print management  
These topics describe the best methods of managing the work that the printer is doing.  
Cancelling a page that is printing  
Shows you how to cancel a page that is currently being printed.  
Cancelling the drying time  
Shows you how release a page from the printer before the drying time has finished.  
 
Cancelling a page that is printing  
Use the following procedure to cancel a page that is currently being printed.  
1. Press the Cancel key on the front panel.  
Cancel key  
The printer advances the paper as though the print were finished. A multi-page job or a big file may take  
longer to stop printing than other files.  
   
Cancelling the drying time  
CAUTION: Use caution when performing this procedure as an image that has had insufficient time to dry  
could be damaged.  
Use the following procedure to cancel the drying time for a job that is waiting for the end of drying time.  
1. Press Cancel or Form Feed & Cut on the front panel.  
Cancel key  
Form Feed & Cut key  
The printer will release the paper and it will fall into the paper bin.  
     
Printer configuration  
These topics explain how to change the configuration of your printer.  
Printer information  
Front panel setup  
Altitude setting  
Graphics language and networks  
Setting up the I/O card  
Controlling the cutter  
Upgrading your printer  
Color settings  
Logs  
 
Printer information  
Your printer provides an information display on the front panel that shows the current configuration of the system.  
You can also print out this information directly on your printer.  
Select Set-up > Printer information to view the information.  
The printer information screen shows the following information about your printer:  
Model number  
Serial number  
Service ID  
Scan axis usage  
Paper axis usage  
Service station usage  
Spittoon usage  
Pinch lift usage  
Cutter usage  
Firmware rev.  
Accessory rev.  
Paper used  
Ink used (C, M, Y, K)  
Ink usage  
 
Front panel setup  
You can configure the following parameters for the front panel:  
Menu and message language  
Alert buzzer  
Screen contrast  
 
Menu and message language  
The following languages can be used for all menus and messages shown on the front panel of your printer:  
English  
German  
Spanish  
Catalan  
French  
Italian  
Japanese  
Portuguese  
Korean  
Simplified Chinese  
Traditional Chinese  
To change the language:  
1. Select the Front Panel > Language option from the Set-up menu.  
2. Scroll to the language you require and press Enter.  
 
Alert buzzer  
Your printer is equipped with an alert buzzer that is used to warn you when:  
A task has completed.  
An error has been detected.  
You change a parameter from the front panel.  
To enable or disable the buzzer:  
1. Select the Front Panel > Buzzer option from the Set-up menu.  
2. Highlight Buzzer = On or Buzzer = Off (whichever is displayed) and press Enter.  
3. Scroll to the option you require, On or Off, and press Enter.  
 
Screen contrast  
You can adjust the screen contrast of the front panel to best suit the ambient lighting conditions at your location.  
The contrast can be varied from 0% to 100% in 5% increments. The default setting is 50% and is suitable for most  
situations.  
To adjust the screen contrast:  
1. Select the Front Panel > Contrast option from the Set-up menu.  
NOTE:  
Any value below 20% shows a blank screen and any value over 80% shows a black screen.  
2. Scroll to the required value and press Enter.  
 
Altitude setting  
Your printer contains a vacuum pump which is used to hold the paper onto the platen. The altitude of your location  
affects the efficiency of this pump, so you need to specify the altitude to ensure that the pump operates correctly.  
To set the altitude:  
1. Select the Altitude option from the Set-up menu.  
2. Scroll to the required value (0 – 1000 m, 1000 – 2000 m, or > 2000 m) and press Enter.  
The following table shows the corresponding altitude values in feet.  
Meters  
Feet  
0 – 1000  
0 – 3300  
1000 – 2000 3300 – 6600  
> 2000 >6600  
 
Graphics language and networks  
For system administrators  
If you are using the printer with a network spooler, consider having your system administrator modify the spooler  
to insert the PJL language-switching commands automatically at the beginning and end of each file. This allows  
the printer to switch automatically into the correct graphics language for your current print and returns the printer  
to the front-panel graphics language setting for subsequent prints.  
For information on ordering PJL reference information, see Ordering accessories.  
   
Setting up the I/O card  
Network  
With a network interface (such as the HP Jetdirect Print Server), refer to your network interface documentation for  
advice on any front-panel configuration. The front-panel menu is I/O Setup > Card Set-up.  
To change the I/O time-out setting  
Some software applications do not write a file terminator at the end of a file. In this case, the printer does not know  
when the file is complete and will wait for more data until the end of the “I/O Time-out” period. By default, this  
period is 30 minutes. You can change the time-out setting in the front-panel menu  
(Set-Up > I/O setup > I/O Timeout) to as little as 30 seconds.  
     
Controlling the cutter  
With roll paper loaded, when any print job you have sent to the printer completes, the roll is automatically cut and  
the print job falls into the paper bin. There may be a delay before the roll is cut due to the drying time you have  
programmed or the printer has automatically selected.  
In some situations you may not wish to cut the roll after each print job. Use the following procedure to control the  
cutter. The front panel menu selections are:  
Then press:  
Select (using the keys)  
1. Paper menu  
2. Cutter  
Enter  
Enter  
Enter  
3. ON or OFF  
   
Upgrading your printer  
System software  
“System software” is the name given to the type of software that runs the functions in your printer.  
System software downloading  
From time to time there will be system software upgrades available from Hewlett-Packard. System software  
upgrades increase your printer’s functionality and enhance the features that your printer already possesses.  
System software can be downloaded from the Internet.  
For the latest upgrades, go to http//www.hp.com/go/graphic-arts/. Follow the on-screen directions.  
   
Color settings  
Your printer can emulate the color behavior of offset printing presses, allowing you to use your printer for color  
proofing. To get accurate colors for your proof, select the color emulation mode that matches your offset printing  
standards from the Ink menu Color settings option. The selections are:  
Color/monochrome  
Refer to Printing images in grayscale for further details.  
Color—the printer prints in color.  
Grayscale—the printer prints the color image in grey shades.  
True black—the printer prints the color image in grey shades using black ink only.  
RGB  
Native/Device RGB—no ink emulation  
sRGB—standard RGB  
rendering intent  
Perceptual  
Saturation  
Colorimetric  
   
Logs  
Your printer keeps a printhead log and an error log. These logs are normally used by service engineers.  
Printhead log  
The printhead log contains a list of the last five printheads of each color with information about the usage of each  
printhead.  
Error log  
Lists the last errors that the printer has detected with the date the error occurred and a unique error code for the  
type of error detected.  
 
Other  
This chapter provides miscellaneous procedures and information that may be required to ensure your printer  
remains in a fully operational condition at all times.  
It contains the following topics:  
Care of the printer  
Installing expansion cards  
Specifications  
Ordering accessories  
Glossary  
Care of the printer  
This section contains information on general maintenance of the printer.  
Cleaning the printer  
Instructions for cleaning the exterior of your printer.  
Storing and moving your printer  
Instructions on how to move and store your printer.  
 
Cleaning the printer  
WARNING: To avoid an electric shock, make sure that the printer is switched OFF and disconnected from  
the mains supply before you clean it. Do not let water get inside the printer.  
CAUTION: Do not use abrasive cleaners on the printer.  
NOTE:  
Any maintenance or repairs beyond those described in this chapter should be done by a  
qualified service technician.  
Cleaning the printer’s exterior  
Clean the outside of the printer as required with a damp sponge or a soft cloth and a mild household cleaner such  
as non-abrasive liquid soap.  
 
Storing and moving your printer  
If you need to move your printer or store it for an extended period of time, you need to prepare it properly to avoid  
possible damage to it. To prepare the printer, follow the instructions given below:  
CAUTION: It is important that you do not remove the ink cartridges and printheads before moving or  
storing the printer.  
1. Switch the power off at the on/off power switch on the front of the printer.  
2. Disconnect any cables connected to the printer: parallel interface, USB interface or LAN connection.  
3. Repack the printer in its original packaging. Refer to Assembly/Repacking Instructions available on the HP  
Web site (http://www.hp.com/go/graphic-arts/) for details.  
4. If you have to move your printer you will need the original packaging. If necessary you can order a kit of the  
packaging materials. Contact HP support and they will supply it to you. If necessary they will repackage the  
printer for you.  
 
Installing expansion cards  
The following options are available for your printer:  
Network card installation  
 
Network card installation  
HP Jetdirect network card installation  
1. Before installing a card, switch off the  
printer and unplug it from the mains  
electricity supply.  
2. Carefully remove the plastic cover from the  
left-hand rear of the printer by unclipping it.  
This cover gives access to the two slots for  
an Accessory card and a LAN card.  
Press in the thumb-tab on the side  
furthest from the edge that has the  
cable-hole.  
Ease the cover out in the direction of  
the embossed arrow, pivoting it by the  
hinge clips on the side that has the  
edge cable-hole.  
Continued …  
   
HP Jetdirect network card installation  
3. Remove the cover completely. Inside the  
compartment there are two slots for a LAN  
card or an Accessory card.  
If you use an HP-GL/2 card, the LAN card  
should be in the right-hand slot (nearer the  
back of the printer), the accessory card on  
the left.  
4. To insert a LAN card (or an Accessory  
card), remove the metal cover from the  
appropriate slot by unscrewing its two  
screws.  
5. When you have inserted the card, screw it  
into place, using its two screws (at the top  
and bottom of the card).  
Previous …  
Continued …  
 
HP Jetdirect network card installation  
6. Insert the LAN cable into the LAN card. It is  
simply pushed into place and clicks when  
locked.  
7. Carefully replace the plastic cover by  
clipping it back into place.  
Put the two hinge clips on the side that  
has the edge cable-hole into their slots.  
Swivel the cover in the direction  
opposite to the embossed arrow and  
clip the other two tabs on the opposite  
side into their slots. Ensure that the  
LAN cable passes correctly through the  
edge cable-hole (shown by the yellow  
arrow).  
Route the LAN cable carefully so that it  
does not interfere with the spindle or  
roll.  
8. Once you have completed the physical installation of the card, you will have to configure  
it for your LAN, see Setting up the I/O card.  
Previous …  
 
Specifications  
Functional specifications  
Memory specifications  
Printer power specifications  
Ecological specifications  
Environmental specifications  
Acoustic specifications  
Connection specifications  
 
Functional specifications  
HP Designjet 510 and 510ps functional specifications  
Functional specifications  
Four colors: cyan, magenta, yellow and black.  
36 kHz (cyan, magenta, yellow).  
36 kHz (black).  
Printheads:  
600 dpi,  
HP ink  
supplies  
Cyan  
Magenta  
Yellow  
Black  
28 or 69 ml  
69 ml  
Ink cartridges:  
Width (carriage axis)  
Length (paper axis)  
Paper sizes  
Minimum  
Maximum  
Minimum  
Maximum  
Roll – D/A1 size  
printer  
625 mm  
25 in  
100 mm  
4 in  
roll external  
diameter  
1000 mm  
40 in  
Roll – A0+/  
E+ size printer  
1071.8 mm  
42.2 in  
140 mm  
5.5 in  
Sheet – D/  
A1 size printer  
625 mm  
25 in  
140 mm  
5.5 in  
1897 mm  
74.7 in  
Sheet – A0+/  
E+ size printer  
1071.8 mm  
42.2 in  
More …  
       
HP Designjet 510 and 510ps functional specifications  
Functional specifications  
a
HP supported paper types  
HP Bright White Inkjet Paper (Bond)  
HP Vellum  
HP Natural Tracing Paper  
HP Coated Paper  
HP Heavyweight Coated Paper  
HP Matte Film  
HP High-Gloss Photo Paper  
HP Semi-Gloss Photo Paper  
HP Paper-Based Semi-Gloss  
HP Clear Film  
HP Translucent Bond  
HP Studio Canvas  
HP Satin Poster Paper  
HP Banners with Tyvek®  
HP Colorfast Adhesive Vinyl  
Previous …  
More …  
 
HP Designjet 510 and 510ps functional specifications  
Functional specifications  
Line drawing/text Image  
Resolution  
Print mode  
Fast  
Render  
Halftone  
Render  
Halftone  
Render  
Halftone  
Render  
Halftone  
300×300dpi  
600×300 dpi  
600×600 dpi  
600×600 dpi  
600×600 dpi  
600×600 dpi  
600×600 dpi  
1200×600 dpi  
150×150 dpi  
600×300 dpi  
300×300 dpi  
600×300 dpi  
600×600 dpi  
600×600 dpi  
1200×1200 dpi  
Normal  
Best (default)  
Best  
(maximum detail)  
b
2400×1200 dpi  
Previous …  
More …  
   
HP Designjet 510 and 510ps functional specifications  
Functional specifications  
Margins  
Roll and sheet (normal)  
Side margins 5 mm  
Roll (small)  
All margins 5 mm  
Leading edge margin 17 mm  
Trailing edge margin 17 mm  
Graphics  
languages  
supported  
HP-GL/2  
HP-RTL  
CALRASTER  
Accuracy  
0.2% of the specified vector length at 23º (73ºF), 50-60% relative humidity, on HP  
special polyester film.  
Previous …  
a. From time to time, new paper types may become available. For up-to-date information, please  
contact your HP dealer or our Web site, http://www.hp.com/go/designjet/.  
b. Glossy photo paper only.  
       
Physical specifications  
Physical specifications  
Type  
Weight  
Width  
Depth  
Height  
D/A1 size printer  
38.5 kg  
85 lb  
1253 mm  
49 in  
470 mm  
19 in  
349 mm  
14 in  
A0+/E+ size  
printer  
45 kg  
99 lb  
1690 mm  
67 in  
674 mm  
27 in  
1100 mm  
43 in  
 
Memory specifications  
Memory specifications  
Internal RAM  
160 MB  
416 MB  
Can be upgraded to:  
   
Printer power specifications  
Printer power specifications  
Source  
100–240 V AC ±10% auto-ranging  
50/60 Hz  
Frequency  
Current  
3 A maximum  
Consumption  
150 W maximum  
   
Ecological specifications  
Ecological specifications  
Energy efficiency To determine the ENERGY STAR® qualification status of this  
product, see http://www.hp.com/go/energystar/. ENERGY STAR  
and the ENERGY STAR trademark are registered U.S.  
trademarks.  
Manufacturing  
process  
Free from ozone-depleting chemicals (Montreal Protocol).  
Plastics  
Free from brominated flame retardants (PBB and PBDE).  
All housing parts made of the same material: ABS.  
Parts marked according to ISO 11469 standard.  
Metals  
Enclosures made of electro-galvanized steel sheet.  
Packaging  
Cardboard (non-chlorine-bleached) and foam are 100%  
recyclable.  
Inks used for printing do not contain heavy metals.  
User  
Majority provided in Adobe Acrobat PDF format on CD-ROM  
documentation  
Batteries  
Not used.  
Recyclablility  
Modular construction, screws easy to find and disassembly done  
using universal tools.  
   
Environmental specifications  
Environmental specifications  
Operating ranges Printing:  
15°C to 35°C (59° F to 95° F) RH 20% to  
70%.  
Optimal print quality for HP  
glossy paper:  
15°C to 30°C (59° F to 86° F) RH 20% to  
80%.  
Optimal print quality for other 15°C to 35°C (59° F to 95° F) RH 20% to  
HP papers:  
70%.  
Non-operating  
ranges  
Printer:  
-40°C to 70°C (-40° F to 158° F)  
-40°C to 60°C (-40° F to 140° F)  
Packed consumable items  
and system:  
NOTE:  
At altitudes greater then 3000 m, the printer may have operational problems.  
     
Acoustic specifications  
Acoustic specifications  
Operating sound pressure  
Idle sound pressure  
54 dB (from a one-meter bystander position)  
< 30 dB (A) (from a one-meter bystander  
position)  
Operating sound power  
Idle sound power  
6.5 Bels (A)  
< 4.3 Bels (A)  
   
Connection specifications  
Cable specification  
Recommended cables  
   
Cable specification  
The connector on the printer is a 36-pin female connector. Most existing parallel cables support IEEE-1284  
compatible communication, but for use with this printer, the cable must meet the specifications in the following  
table:  
Parallel (IEEE-1284 compatible/Centronics) Interface  
Pin  
1
Wire/Signal Name  
Source  
computer  
both  
Strobe  
2 … 9  
10  
D0 … D7 (data lines)  
Ack  
printer  
printer  
printer  
printer  
computer  
11  
Busy  
12  
PError  
Select (SelectOut)  
AutoFd  
GND  
13  
14  
16  
19 … 30  
31  
GND  
Init  
computer  
printer  
32  
Fault  
36  
SelectIn  
computer  
     
Recommended cables  
The following cable is recommended for optimum performance and electromagnetic compatibility:  
Recommended cable  
Interface type (computer)  
HP part number  
Cable length  
Connector type at  
computer end of  
cable  
IEEE compatible/Centronics  
Interface (All)  
C2951A  
C2392A  
3.0 m  
5.0 m  
25-pin male  
USB  
USB plug  
 
Ordering accessories  
You can order supplies and accessories in any of the following ways:  
Call your local authorized HP dealer.  
Contact your local HP Sales and Support office.  
Refer to the Hewlett-Packard Support / Services booklet that was supplied with your printer.  
Hardware  
Consumable items  
   
Hardware  
Item  
HP part number  
Memory module  
256 MB  
CH654A  
The memory expansion module is: SODIMM PC2700 333 MHz 256 MB DDR CL = 2.5  
a
Jetdirect EIO network cards  
J7934A  
HP Jetdirect 620n Fast Ethernet  
HP Jetdirect 630n IPv6 Gigabit Ethernet  
HP Jetdirect IPv6/IPsec Gigabit Ethernet  
HP Jetdirect ew2400 802.11g Wireless  
HP Jetdirect en1700 IPv6, Fast Ethernet  
610 mm - 24 inch  
J7997G  
J7961A  
J7951G  
J7988G  
C2388A  
C2389A  
C7782A  
USB print servers  
Spindle  
1067 mm - 42 inch  
Stand 610 mm - 24 inch  
FL  
a. Supported for the HP Designjet 510 but not for the 510ps  
 
Consumable items  
Item  
Ink  
Color  
HP supply no. Capacity  
HP part number  
Black  
82  
69 ml  
CH565A  
C4911A  
C4912A  
C4913A  
CH566A  
CH567A  
CH568A  
C4810A  
C4811A  
C4812A  
C4813A  
cartridges  
Cyan  
Magenta  
Yellow  
Cyan  
82  
69 ml  
Magenta  
Yellow  
Black  
82  
11  
28 ml  
Printheads  
Cyan  
Magenta  
Yellow  
To achieve the best performance from your printer, we recommend that you use only genuine Hewlett-Packard  
accessories and supplies, whose reliability and performance have been thoroughly tested to give trouble-free  
performance.  
 
Glossary  
Term  
Meaning  
ANSI paper  
An American standard paper size; e.g. D, E.  
Architectural The Architectural paper sizing system.  
paper  
application  
Centronics  
clipping  
The software you use to create your drawings.  
A standard for the parallel interface between computer and device.  
Losing part of a drawing at the edges.  
CMP  
Complementary Media Program that helps HP customers grow their  
businesses by referencing third-party printing material choices to ensure  
maximum HP Designjet printer flexibility and printing solutions.  
CMYK  
Cyan, magenta, yellow and black. The colors of the printer’s four inks, and  
also a standard color model.  
Coated  
paper  
Paper coated on one side for inkjet printing.  
default  
A value or condition that is assumed if no other value or condition is  
specified.  
device  
An external item connected to the computer: printer, tape drive, etc. Your HP  
Designjet is a device.  
dpi  
Dots per inch, a measure of print resolution.  
drivers  
front panel  
Software that controls the communication between a computer and a device.  
The control panel on the front right of the printer.  
front panel  
menus  
The structure of options in the front-panel display.  
                 
Term  
Meaning  
graphics  
language  
A programming language telling a print device how to output graphic data.  
grayscale  
Shades of gray to represent colors.  
A glossy, opaque photographic paper.  
high-gloss  
photo  
HP-GL/2  
One of Hewlett-Packard’s standard graphics languages for plotters and  
printers. Produces vector data.  
I/O Input/  
output  
The transmission of data between a computer and a device.  
IEEE-1284  
A standard issued by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers  
(IEEE) as the Standard Signaling Method for a Bi-directional Parallel  
Peripheral Interface for Personal Computers  
ink cartridge  
inked area  
The part of the HP ink supplies which contains all the ink used in the printer.  
It is installed into the printer on the right-hand side.  
The smallest rectangle that contains all the content of the drawing, while  
maintaining its relative dimensions.  
ISO paper  
JIS  
An international standard paper size; e.g. A1, A2, etc.  
A Japanese standard paper size.  
LAN  
Local area network.  
long-axis  
printing  
Printing a page when the length is longer than a standard page size.  
margin  
The space around the page added by the printer to separate one page from  
another and to avoid printing right to the edge of the paper.  
                 
Term  
Meaning  
nesting  
Placing two or more pages side-by-side on roll paper to avoid waste.  
Located underneath the printhead. The nozzles direct the ink onto the page.  
A set of logical pens defined by color and width.  
nozzles  
palette  
PJL  
Printer Job Language. A programming language that controls jobs going to a  
printer.  
parallel  
interface  
A type of interface between computer and device. Generally faster than a  
serial interface.  
PANTONE  
The PANTONE MATCHING SYSTEM® is an international standard for color  
communication in the graphics art industry.  
pen  
Even though the printer has no physical pens, the lines it draws match the  
attributes of a pen.  
platen  
The exterior part of the printer on which the paper rests before going into the  
printer.  
printhead  
The printhead is installed into the carriage assembly. It is the part that prints  
the ink onto the paper.  
printing area Page size minus margins.  
PostScript  
Adobe PostScript is a computer language that describes the appearance of a  
page, including elements such as text, graphics, and scanned images, to a  
printer or other output device.  
queueing  
raster  
Placing each print received by the device into memory for processing with  
other prints.  
A method for defining an image, in terms of dots rather than lines. Raster  
data typically needs more memory than vector data.  
               
Term  
Meaning  
rendering  
intent  
Rendering intent is a concept defined by ICC Spec ICC.1:1998-09, “File  
Format for Color Profiles”.  
From the specification: “Rendering intent specifies the style of reproduction  
to be used during the evaluation of this profile in a sequence of profiles. It  
applies specifically to that profile in the sequence and not to the entire  
sequence. Typically, the user or application will set the rendering intent  
dynamically at runtime or embedding time.”  
RGB  
RIP  
Red, green and blue. A standard color model.  
Raster Image Processor.  
RTL  
Raster Transfer Language is one of Hewlett-Packard’s standard graphics  
languages for plotters and printers. Produces raster data.  
spindle  
The rod that holds the roll of paper.  
paper-axis  
The vertical axis in which the paper feed moves, as you look at the printer  
from the front.  
scan-axis  
The horizontal axis in which the print carriage moves, as you look at the  
printer from the front.  
service  
station  
The part of the printer that services the printheads. It keeps the printheads  
clean and stops them from drying out.  
USB  
Universal Serial Bus.  
         
clearing paper jam  
clipped images ☞  
coated paper ☞  
color accuracy  
Index  
A
acoustic specifications ☞  
action keys ☞  
configuration ☞  
additional information ☞  
settings ☞  
paper ☞  
adjusting page size ☞  
non-PostScript files ☞  
adjusting the page size in the front panel ☞  
advanced calibration ☞  
aligning printhead ☞  
ANSI paper ☞  
Architectural paper ☞  
B
Back key ☞  
banding ☞  
Best ☞  
blurred lines ☞  
bright white inkjet paper ☞  
color alignment problems ☞  
color consistency problems ☞  
color settings ☞  
colors  
internal palettes ☞  
communications problems ☞  
component identification ☞  
connection specifications ☞  
correcting the printer configuration ☞  
cutter replacement ☞  
C
display screen ☞  
Down key ☞  
drivers ☞  
drying time ☞  
cancelling ☞  
procedure ☞  
settings  
cable specifications ☞  
cables  
interface ☞  
parallel ☞  
calibration ☞  
Cancel key ☞  
cancel print ☞  
cancelling drying time ☞  
cancelling the drying time ☞  
canvas ☞  
choosing paper ☞  
clear film ☞  
automatic ☞  
manual ☞  
none ☞  
typical ☞  
identifying components ☞  
image appearance ☞  
image clipping ☞  
image error  
E
ecological specifications ☞  
Enter key ☞  
environmental specifications ☞  
image is clipped ☞  
long-axis image is clipped ☞  
output contains only a partial print ☞  
image is clipped ☞  
image is unexpectedly rotated ☞  
image rotation ☞  
page size ☞  
what is rotated ☞  
incomplete lines problems ☞  
information  
F
Fast ☞  
finding the source of a problem ☞  
Form Feed & Cut key ☞  
front panel  
action keys ☞  
display screen ☞  
introduction ☞  
menu structure ☞  
navigation keys ☞  
page size setting ☞  
functional specifications ☞  
roll paper ☞  
ink ☞  
G
system  
graphics language and networks ☞  
precautions ☞  
ink bleeds ☞  
ink cartridge  
H
handling paper ☞  
heavy coated paper ☞  
high-gloss photo ☞  
HP ink supplies ☞  
HP No 11 ☞  
problem inserting ☞  
replacement ☞  
statistics ☞  
ink cartridges  
HP ink supplies ☞  
ink emulation mode  
selecting ☞  
HP No 82 ☞  
ink cartridges ☞  
printheads ☞  
Ink menu ☞  
I
ink supplies. See HP ink supplies  
ink supply problems ☞  
ink system  
I/O time-out setting  
changing ☞  
cartridge  
replacement ☞  
statistics ☞  
drying time ☞  
automatic ☞  
manual ☞  
Enter ☞  
Menu ☞  
Up ☞  
L
loading  
roll paper ☞  
sheet paper ☞  
loading roll paper problems ☞  
loading sheet paper problems ☞  
long-axis image is clipped ☞  
none ☞  
printhead  
alignment ☞  
replacement ☞  
statistics ☞  
M
inked area ☞  
installing  
roll paper ☞  
interface cables ☞  
interfaces  
margins ☞  
margins specifications ☞  
marks or scratches on glossy paper ☞  
matte film ☞  
memory ☞  
memory specifications ☞  
menu  
Fast Ethernet 10/100 base TX ☞  
parallel ☞  
USB ☞  
Ink ☞  
Job Mananagement ☞  
Paper ☞  
internal palettes ☞  
ISO paper ☞  
J
Set-up ☞  
Job Management menu ☞  
Menu key ☞  
menu structure ☞  
merge ☞  
K
keys  
action ☞  
mirror image ☞  
Cancel ☞  
Form Feed & Cut ☞  
navigation ☞  
Back ☞  
N
natural tracing paper ☞  
navigating the menu system ☞  
navigation  
Down ☞  
example ☞  
navigation keys ☞  
network interface  
viewing current settings ☞  
paper ☞  
changing settings ☞  
networks and graphics language ☞  
non-PostScript files  
adjusting page size ☞  
Normal ☞  
choice ☞  
cutter ☞  
handling ☞  
important points ☞  
paper types  
additional information ☞  
bright white inkjet paper ☞  
canvas ☞  
O
obtaining roll paper information ☞  
obtaining sheet paper information ☞  
one image overlays another on same sheet ☞  
other sources of information for incorrect printed image ☞  
output contains only a partial print ☞  
overlapping lines  
clear film ☞  
coated paper ☞  
combinations ☞  
heavy coated paper ☞  
high-gloss photo ☞  
matte film ☞  
plain paper ☞  
poster paper ☞  
print quality selection ☞  
supported ☞  
changing treatment of ☞  
P
page description ☞  
page format  
inked area ☞  
margins ☞  
page size ☞  
printing area ☞  
size ☞  
translucent bond ☞  
vellum ☞  
roll  
page size ☞  
adjusting ☞  
and clipped images ☞  
palette ☞  
installing ☞  
loading ☞  
removing from printer ☞  
removing from spindle ☞  
unloading ☞  
palettes  
changing colors ☞  
changing pen width ☞  
internal ☞  
sheet  
loading ☞  
unloading ☞  
which edge first ☞  
which side up ☞  
printing speeds and print quality ☞  
problems ☞  
Paper menu ☞  
settings ☞  
paper problems  
blurred lines ☞  
print resolution ☞  
printable area  
clearing jam ☞  
general rules ☞  
ink bleeds ☞  
ArchitecturaI paper ☞  
ISO paper ☞  
printed image incorrect  
image is in one portion of the printing area ☞  
image is unexpectedly rotated ☞  
one image overlays another on same sheet ☞  
other sources of information ☞  
print distorted or unintelligible ☞  
printer does not print ☞  
printer drivers ☞  
loading  
roll paper ☞  
sheetl paper ☞  
marks or scratches ☞  
output ☞  
warped lines ☞  
paper sizes specifications ☞  
parallel interface ☞  
parallel interface specifications ☞  
pen widths  
printer seems too slow ☞  
printhead  
alignment ☞  
changing ☞  
pens ☞  
physical specifications ☞  
plain paper ☞  
problem inserting ☞  
problems after replacement ☞  
replacement ☞  
statistics ☞  
Pocket Guide ☞  
poster paper ☞  
PostScript upgrade ☞  
power specifications ☞  
print appearance  
controlling ☞  
printheads  
HP ink supplies ☞  
printing area ☞  
problems  
banding ☞  
color alignment ☞  
print cancel ☞  
print distorted or unintelligible ☞  
print quality  
color consistency ☞  
configuration correction ☞  
finding the source ☞  
incomplete lines ☞  
advanced options ☞  
ink supply  
after replacement of printhead ☞  
sheet paper  
information ☞  
inserting the ink cartridge ☞  
inserting the printhead ☞  
print quality ☞  
solutions ☞  
solving ☞  
loading ☞  
unloading ☞  
which edge first ☞  
which side up ☞  
solutions to problems ☞  
specifications  
stepped lines ☞  
troubleshooting ☞  
accuracy ☞  
acoustic ☞  
cables ☞  
connection ☞  
ecological ☞  
environmental ☞  
functional ☞  
graphics languages supported ☞  
margins ☞  
memory ☞  
paper sizes ☞  
R
removing  
roll paper  
from printer ☞  
from spindle ☞  
replacing  
cutter ☞  
ink cartridge ☞  
printhead ☞  
resolution specifications ☞  
resolution. See print resolution  
roll paper  
parallel interface ☞  
physical ☞  
power ☞  
information ☞  
installing ☞  
loading ☞  
removing from printer ☞  
removing from spindle ☞  
unloading ☞  
resolution ☞  
speed and print quality ☞  
stepped lines problems ☞  
supported paper types ☞  
system software upgrades ☞  
T
rotating an image ☞  
translucent bond ☞  
troubleshooting  
procedure ☞  
typical drying times ☞  
S
Set-up menu ☞  
Setup Poster ☞  
typical printing times ☞  
U
Universal Serial Bus ☞  
unloading  
roll paper ☞  
sheet paper ☞  
Up key ☞  
upgrading system software ☞  
USB ☞  
user interface ☞  
User’s Reference Guide ☞  
V
vellum ☞  
W
warped lines ☞  
Web page ☞  

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