11/15/2022 0 Comments Accurip demo![]() ![]() This is demonstrated on the PRO 3800 but the same applies on any printer than offers rear feed. I have a video showing how easy it is to do this. I can rear feed stock on ANY of my now over 15 printers and all feed paper without a problem. It is the same with ANY EPSON CANON or HP pro printer that give you the real load option for thicker material. If it is skewed in any way then it will be rejected. Causes? The paper edges are not 90 degrees or you did not loaded squarely. It must be square to the travel of the head. ![]() Not sure what it is you are getting to here but if the paper is "Flied" out of the printer after loading from the Manual-Rear loader, it means that the front edge is not parallel to the sensor that checks it. You mean where you park the paper precisely as directed, and, then, when you did print, it just flied the paper through the printer!!!!! I sure hope the newer Epson printers have better paper feed systems than the legacy ones. "Anything thinner but not too thick to be fed through the default top feeder must be loaded through the Manual Rear Loader." Anything thinner but not too thick to be fed through the default top feeder must be loaded through the Manual Rear Loader. The front loader on R2400 R2880 R2000 is only for the 1.3mm thick media such as Bristol Board. I've experienced the same problem myself. It is simply not feeding the media through the correct loader. It has absolutely nothing to do with insufficient ink drying or media coating. Blurry printing with exactly the same results as what the OP shows. If he feeds with the Manual Rear loader he will not have that problem any longer. Your situation appears to be the opposite. With thick card-stock, the print-head nozzles can actually drag across the paper, and you may hear a scrapping sound. With Canon, Matte paper is very thin, yet that is the Meda-Type for card-stock. You do have to be careful with card-stock, which isn't a standard width. Is the paper you are using intended for color laser printers? Probably not as card-stock tends to be double-sided, but a possibility.Īlso, some papers are "universal" for dye and pigment, and some are intended just for dye, and some for just pigment. However, if the ink smudges when you wipe your finger on it, and seems to be less than truly dry, you may have printed on the wrong side. My impression is that color accuracy isn't a big deal for you, like having accurate flesh tones. What you might do is look at the specs for the different Media-Types available to your printer, and pick a Media-Type that is closer in width to what you actually have. The print-head assumes it is a certain height from the paper, as the ink explodes / squeezed out of the print-head nozzles and "flies" to the paper. Probably agree if you are experiencing "blurry" details. Using the Front Loader right? That's what's causing the Blurry printing. ![]()
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