HP DesignJet T730 User guide - Page 144

Lines are blurred, Line lengths are inaccurate, Heavyweight Coated Paper.

Page 144 highlights

Lines are blurred Humidity can cause ink to soak into the paper, making the lines blurred and fuzzy. Try the following: 1. Check that your environmental conditions (temperature, humidity) are suitable for high-quality printing. See Environmental specifications on page 192. 2. Check that the paper type selected in the front panel is the same as the paper type you are using. See View information about the paper on page 39. 3. Try changing to a heavier paper type, such as HP Heavyweight Coated Paper. 4. Select a lower print quality (such as Speed); the printer will then use less ink. 5. Select a paper type that is slightly thinner than the paper you have loaded; this will persuade the printer to use less ink. Here are some example paper types in ascending order of thickness: Plain Paper, Coated Paper, Heavyweight Coated Paper. 6. If you are using glossy paper, try changing to a different type of glossy paper. 7. Print the Print Quality Diagnostic Report, and align the printhead if recommended in the report. See The Print Quality Diagnostic Report on page 99. Line lengths are inaccurate If you have measured your printed lines and find that the lengths are not sufficiently accurate for your purposes, you can try to improve line length accuracy in the following ways: 1. Print on HP Heavyweight Coated Paper, for which your printer's line length accuracy is specified. See Functional specifications on page 190. Polyester film is about ten times more dimensionally stable than paper. However, using film that is thinner or thicker than HP Heavyweight Coated Paper will reduce line length accuracy. 2. Set the Print Quality slider to Quality. 3. Maintain the room at a steady temperature between 10 and 30°C (50 and 86°F). 4. Load the roll of film and let it rest for five minutes before printing. 5. If you are still not satisfied, try recalibrating the paper advance. See Recalibrate the paper advance on page 106. 140 Chapter 15 Troubleshooting print-quality issues ENWW

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Lines are blurred
Humidity can cause ink to soak into the paper, making the lines blurred and fuzzy. Try the following:
1.
Check that your environmental conditions (temperature, humidity) are suitable for high-quality printing.
See
Environmental
specifications
on page
192
.
2.
Check that the paper type selected in the front panel is the same as the paper type you are using. See
View
information about the paper
on page
39
.
3.
Try changing to a heavier paper type, such as HP Heavyweight Coated Paper.
4.
Select a lower print quality (such as Speed); the printer will then use less ink.
5.
Select a paper type that is slightly thinner than the paper you have loaded; this will persuade the printer to
use less ink. Here are some example paper types in ascending order of thickness: Plain Paper, Coated Paper,
Heavyweight Coated Paper.
6.
If you are using glossy paper, try changing to a different type of glossy paper.
7.
Print the Print Quality Diagnostic Report, and align the printhead if recommended in the report. See
The
Print Quality Diagnostic Report
on page
99
.
Line lengths are inaccurate
If you have measured your printed lines and find that the lengths are not sufficiently accurate for your purposes,
you can try to improve line length accuracy in the following ways:
1.
Print on HP Heavyweight Coated Paper, for which your printer's line length accuracy is specified. See
Functional
specifications
on page
190
.
Polyester film is about ten times more dimensionally stable than paper. However, using film that is thinner
or thicker than HP Heavyweight Coated Paper will reduce line length accuracy.
2.
Set the Print Quality slider to
Quality
.
3.
Maintain the room at a steady temperature between 10 and 30°C (50 and 86°F).
4.
Load the roll of film and let it rest for five minutes before printing.
5.
If you are still not satisfied, try recalibrating the paper advance. See
Recalibrate the paper advance
on page
106
.
140
Chapter 15
Troubleshooting print-quality issues
ENWW