Using U4/CODE to enter characters

Certain settings give you a chance to enter some kind of identifying name. As explained earlier (page 1.11), you can do this with the one-touch keys. But you may also use the U4/CODE key in combination with other keys to produce a wide variety of characters, as well as regular letters and numbers. Here’s how to do it:

1 When the machine prompts you to enter a name, press U4/CODE. The display will change to:

Your Name :Code

_

2 Consult the chart below and find the character you wish to enter. First keypress

keypress

 

2 3

4 5

6

7

A B C D E F

0

 

0

@ P `

p Ç É

 

α p

1

!

1

A Q a

q ü æ

 

 

q

2

"

2

B

R

b

r

é

Æ

 

á

β

θ

Second

3

#

3

C

S

 

c

s

â

ô

 

í

ε

4

$

4

D T d

t

ä ö

`.

ó μ Ω

5

%

5

E

U

e

u

à

ò

ú

σ

ü

 

6

&

6

F V f

v å û

 

ñ ρ Σ

 

7

7

G W g w ç ù

 

Ñ ϑ π

 

8

(

8

H

X h

x ê ÿ \ a ÷

x

 

9

)

9

I

Y

i

y

ë

Ö

o

 

 

 

A

*

:

J

Z

 

j

z

è

Ü Φ

¿

j

 

 

B

+

;

K

[

 

k

{

ï

¢

 

 

 

 

 

C

,

<

L

¥

 

l

î

£

 

¡

¢

÷

 

D

-

=

M

]

 

m

}

ì

 

 

 

 

E

.

> N ^ n → Ä

Pt

 

« n

 

 

F

/

?

O

_

 

o

Å

ƒ

 

»

 

 

The legends just outside the box indicate which key you press, and in which order, to get a given character. For example, to get a backslash (\) character, you’d press C, 8. (The blank areas for 2, 0 and C, 0 indicate where spaces occur.)

3 To enter each character, press the indicated keys.

Important: Remember that you also can enter numbers through the numeric keypad and letters and other non-numeric characters through the one-touch keys in combination with the U1/ABC,

U2/abc and U3/SYMBOL keys.

Note: If you make a mistake, press CANCEL to erase leftward. Or, if you want to change just one character in the name, press to move the cursor leftward, or /PROGRAM to move it rightward, to that character. Then re-enter until the name is just as you want it.

4 Press ENTER to save the name.

Beyond the basics

Making settings for printing faxes

You can set three parameters for printing received fax messages:

Print reduction rate

Reduction margin

Half-page reception

You set all three in the same operation (see next page), but each deserves its own brief explanation.

Print reduction rate

Print reduction lets you set the machine to reduce a large incoming document to a size which will fit on your paper. This setting doesn’t affect copies you may make with your machine. Fortunately, however, it also has copy reduction (see page 2.4).

Here are the options for both print reduction and copy reduction settings:

Setting

What it does

 

Automatically reduces printouts at variable rates down to a

Auto

minimum of 70%. Tries to reduce printout to fit on one sheet of

 

your selected paper size; if can’t, prints the image at 100% size

 

on two or more pages.

100%

Performs no reduction. (Due to the sender’s TTI, this may print two

 

pages when receiving a one-page fax document. See 97%, below.)

97%

Reduces an original so that the final printout of a one-page docu-

ment (if the original isn’t larger than the paper in your machine)

 

will be only one page long, despite the TTI.

 

 

91%

Provides slightly more reduction.

81%

Provides even greater reduction. Helpful for certain international

 

stationery sizes, as well as special applications.

75%

Turns legal-sizedoriginals into letter-sizedprinted copies.

 

 

For best results …

While handy, the reduction feature can’t solve every situation. (Also, the printout may omit a small bit of the image at the page break if the machine tries to reduce a legal-sized page onto letter-sized paper at any setting other than 75%.) So, whenever possible, load the correct size of paper before receiving a fax (or making a copy) of that size.

2.3

Page 32
Image 32
Muratec F-120 Using U4/CODE to enter characters, Making settings for printing faxes, Print reduction rate, Your Name Code