HP 800ps HP Designjet 800ps Printer - User's Guide - Page 102

Image is Clipped, Long-Axis Print Is Clipped, Printable Area, Size

Page 102 highlights

Introduction Media & Ink Solutions Front Panel Printer Options Other Index Solving Problems Image Quality Problems Ink Supply Problems Media Problems  Image Error Other Problems Getting Help Image is Clipped • This normally indicates a discrepancy between the actual printing area on the loaded media and the printing area as understood by your software. For general advice on printing areas and page size, see Printable Area. • Check the actual printing area for the media size you have loaded (printing area = media size - margins). For media size and margins, see Printable Area. • Check what your software understands to be the printing area (which it may call "printable area" or "imagable area"). For example, some software applications assume standard printing areas that are larger than those used in this printer. • Check that the orientation of the media is the same as that assumed by your software. The front-panel Paper > Page format > Rotate option changes the orientation of a print and, on roll media, the orientation of the page. It is possible that a rotated image on roll media may be slightly clipped in order to retain the correct page size, as explained in Page Size. • You may have asked to rotate the page from portrait to landscape on media that is not wide enough, for example a D/A1-size page rotated on a D/A1-size roll. • If necessary, change the printing area in your software. • The file may be too large for the printer's memory. Long-Axis Print Is Clipped • Does your software support long-axis prints? • Have you specified an appropriate media size in your software? • Make sure that the printer's Page format > Size is set to Inked area. • There may not be sufficient memory.

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Solving Problems
Image Quality
Problems
Ink Supply
Problems
Media Problems
Image Error
Other Problems
Getting Help
Media & Ink
Introduction
Front Panel
Other
Printer
Options
Index
Solutions
Image is Clipped
This normally indicates a discrepancy between the actual printing area on the loaded media and the printing
area as understood by your software. For general advice on printing areas and page size, see
Printable Area
.
Check the actual printing area for the media size you have loaded (printing area = media size – margins). For
media size and margins, see
Printable Area
.
Check what your software understands to be the printing area (which it may call “printable area” or “imagable
area”). For example, some software applications assume standard printing areas that are larger than those
used in this printer.
Check that the orientation of the media is the same as that assumed by your software. The front-panel
Paper
> Page format > Rotate
option changes the orientation of a print and, on roll media, the orientation of the
page. It is possible that a rotated image on roll media may be slightly clipped in order to retain the correct page
size, as explained in
Page Size
.
You may have asked to rotate the page from portrait to landscape on media that is not wide enough, for exam-
ple a D/A1-size page rotated on a D/A1-size roll.
If necessary, change the printing area in your software.
The file may be too large for the printer’s memory.
Long-Axis Print Is Clipped
Does your software support long-axis prints?
Have you specified an appropriate media size in your software?
Make sure that the printer’s
Page format
>
Size
is set to
Inked area
.
There may not be sufficient memory.