FARGO electronic II manual

Page 61

56

The photos on my ID cards look very pixelated.

The printer’s top cover won’t shut.

A card feeds in and acts like it’s printing, but nothing is printed.

Symptoms: photos do not look smooth or continuous, but rather grainy and unclear.

Some applications have selections you must enable in order for the Color ID Card Printer to use its own dither patterns. For best output, you should always use the Color ID Card PrinterÕs dither patterns. Refer to your application programÕs instruction manual or contact the software manufacturer for details on how such selections are enabled.

For best photo-realistic output, you should always use high resolution 24-bit images. If scanning an image, always scan the image at a 24-bit color setting, at the same size at which you will be printing, and at 300 dpi. If you stretch or Òblow upÓ a small or low resolution image, you will always get a pixelated or grainy effect when printing.

Symptoms: something seems to be in the way and I’m afraid to push harder.

Check that the ribbon and/or overlaminate is seated properly in the printer.

Check that nothing did in fact fall into the printer. Then, go ahead and push slightly harder. The cover and cover latch must engage and this does require some pressure as the cover is closed.

Symptoms: printer sounds like everything is fine, but no image.

You may have loaded the ribbon upside down. Open the printerÕs top cover and check whatÕs happened. If you did load it upside down, reinstall the ribbon properly and give the printhead a thorough cleaning (see Section 8 for printhead cleaning instructions). Be careful not to damage the printhead.

The ribbon may have been loaded backwards. This causes no harm, just turn the ribbon around so the supply roll is on the right side of the printer and the take-up roll is on the left side of the printer, with the ribbon feeding from beneath both rolls.

Check the application program. You may have sent down a request to print absolutely nothing.

Image 61
Contents Color ID Card Printer Printing History For Users in the United States Table of Contents Appendix B Interfacing Information Introduction How Your Color ID Card Printer Works Special FeaturesPage Safety Precautions Vorsicht Sicherheits- maßnahmenAvertissements Consignes de sécurité¡PRECAUCION Precauciones de seguridadPrecauzioni per la Sicurezza Cuidado Precauções de SegurançaChinese or Japanese to be keylined here Chinese or Japanese to be keylined here Arabic to be keylined here Getting Started Identifying the Parts Power About Ribbons Ribbons and CardsPage Loading Ribbon into the Printer About Cards Page Loading Cards into the Printer About Printer’s Laminator Card LaminatingAbout Overlaminates Loading the Overlaminate into the Printer Take-up Roll Running the Self Test Applying PowerHooking Up the Printer Connecting the Color ID Card Printer to Your Computer Page Windows Highlight the Install Unlisted or Updated Installing the 32-Bit Print Spooler for Windows Page Setting Up Windows Printer Driver Card Size Ribbon Type Color Matching Overlay Dither ModePanel Graphics Panel Only Split Ribbon Print Page Orientation Fast 32-bit SpoolerDuplex Printing Controls Magnetics Lamination Page Supplies Required MaintenanceStandard Printhead Cleaning Expanded Printhead Cleaning Cleaning the Printer’s Case Inside Clearing a Card Jam Clearing a Ribbon Jam Cleaning the Card Feed Rollers Cleaning the Drive Roller Maintaining the Cleaning Rollers Adjusting Mechanical AdjustmentsAdjusting Internal Card Guide Card InputInternal Adjusting Card Separator Flap Card Flap Adjustment Adjusting the Laminator Top Edge Bottom Edge Trouble- shooting Symptoms printer makes strange sounds or stops printing My prints have blotches small voids in them My prints have streaks in themPage Page Print Speed Technical SpecificationsIntroduction Magnetic Stripe Encoding ModuleLocations TrackSending Track Information ~1%JULIE ANDERSON623-85-1253? Introduction Centronics- type Parallel Interface Interfacing InformationIndex