Sending faxes

Some guidelines

How big — and small — your pages can be

While you’ll probably be sending normal-sized documents the vast majority of the time, you can fax a piece of paper as small as a notepad sheet or nearly 3′ long!

To be precise, the acceptable dimensions (width × length) are:

SINGLE-SHEET TRANSMISSION

MULTIPLE-SHEET TRANSMISSION

Maximum:

11.0″ × 35.4″

Maximum:

10.1″ ×

14.4″

Minimum:

5.8″ × 4.1″

Minimum:

5.8″ ×

4.1″

Things not to put in your fax

To help avoid troubles ranging from paper jams to out-and-out damage to your machine, please don’t insert:

Folded, curled, torn, wrinkled or very thin pages

Documents with staples, glue, tape, paper clips or still-wet correction fluid

“Sticky notes” (or documents with “sticky notes” attached)

Cardboard, newspaper or fabric

Pages with duplicating carbon on either side

Credit cards or similar small, thick items

Some thoughts on resolution, grayscale and contrast

Reviewing resolution and grayscale

Normal resolution (“NORM” on the control panel) is suitable for most typed docu- ments and simple drawings.

Fine resolution (“FINE” on the control panel) is ideal for maps, moderately compli- cated drawings, floorplans or handwritten documents.

Superfine resolution (“S-FINE on the control panel; “S Fine” on the LCD) repro- duces the detail of extremely complicated drawings or line art.

Grayscale mode (“HALFTONE” on the control panel; “Gray” on the LCD) captures shades in photos and drawings.

Note: If you send a fax in superfine, certain fax models (especially older, non- Muratec models) will receive it only in fine mode. However, you can send a fax in grayscale mode to virtually any fax machine currently in use.

Getting started

Contrast

The rightmost item appearing on the LCD (when there’s a document in the feeder) is the contrast setting. You have three choices:

Normal (“NORM” on the control panel) — Suited to most documents.

Light — Lightens up overly dark, “muddy” original documents.

Dark — Darkens weak, “washed-out” images.

Note: Until you become accustomed to using the Light and Dark settings, you might tend to confuse them. Just remember what we say above — “Light lightens” and “Dark darkens” — to keep it straight!

Entering a pause character when dialing

Your fax machine provides special dialing characters which you may find useful. We’ll discuss most of them later (see page 2.8), but you may need to know now about the pause character. Some long-distance systems require dialing pauses, and pauses can be useful also when you’re dialing through special telephone exchanges.

To insert a pause character, just press REDIAL/PAUSE (after you’ve dialed at least one other character). -/(the pause character) will appear on the display.

Each pause you enter lasts for a factory-set five seconds (see “Changing the pause length,” next page, for how to change this setting).

For example, assuming the pause is at the factory setting, pressing 9, REDIAL/PAUSE, 19725552009 dials 9 [5-second pause] 1 9 7 2 5 5 5 2 0 0 9.

Important: Each pause uses two of the characters you’re allowed in a number.

1.13

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Muratec F-150, F-100, F-120 manual Sending faxes, Some guidelines