●Press Settings to specify how jobs are stored and printed. This setting is saved even when the printer is restarted.
◦Print & Save — prints the job and saves it to disk.
◦Save Only — saves the job to disk without printing it. In this mode, the background color of the Stored Jobs section on the Home Page screen turns green.
◦Print Only — prints without saving the job to disk.
●Press
TIP: When printing a
Properties screen
To view the properties of a Stored Job, or to print a Stored Job, press the job's thumbnail image. From the Stored Job properties screen, you can perform these operations on the print job:
●To print the job, press Load & Print. The printer will prompt you for the number of copies to print. If you have multiple sheets loaded, each copy will print on a separate sheet, and the printer will prompt for additional sheets until the number of copies requested have been printed. You can print the job in any print mode that use the same resolution as the original job.
●To adjust the right, left, leading, or trailing margins, press Margin Settings. The leading and trailing margins are applied to
●To change the print mode of a job, press Print Mode. You can only change the mode to one that uses the resolution at which the job was RIPed. To print the job at a different resolution,
●To delete the job, press Delete.
●To lock or unlock the job, press the appropriate button. Locking a job prevents it from being deleted, but subtracts from the available memory for Stored Jobs.
TIP: If you want to print on a media type that is different from the media specified in a Stored Job, or if you will
When printing a job, the printer checks that the currently loaded media matches the media type that was loaded when the job was stored. If different, a warning is raised. You can choose to not print the job, or ignore the warning and print anyway.
Printing on a media type or in a print mode that is different from the original job may result in a color shift.
TIP: While a print job is being received by the printer and saved to its internal hard disk (a process called “spooling,”) you can switch the UV lamps on or off as desired, rather than wait for the entire job to be spooled.
24 Chapter 4 Printing jobs | ENWW |