HP Designjet L26100 HP Designjet L26500 / L26100 printer series - Maintenance - Page 49
Substrate settings
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Substrate family Self-adhesive Banner Textile Film Synthetic paper Paper-aqueous Paper-solvent Low-temperature substrate Mesh Drying temp. 55 50 55 55 50 45 50 50 Curing temp. 110 110 100 95 80 70 90 80 Heating airflow Autotracking (OMAS) 30 Yes 45 Yes 45 Yes 30 Yes 30 Yes 30 Yes 30 Yes 30 Yes Cutter Yes No No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Substrat e- advance compens ation Input tension Vacuum 0 15 25 0 15 5 0 15 20 0 15 25 0 15 40 0 15 20 0 15 25 0 15 40 50 95 30 Yes Yes 0 15 30 The various settings mentioned above are described below. Setting Passes Drying temp. Curing temp. Heating airflow Description If too low If too high The number of passes specifies how many times the printheads will print over the same area of the substrate. The amount of ink fired per time unit is larger and ink has less time to dry on the substrate. This may create coalescence and banding. The boundaries between passes may be more visible. However, printing speed is relatively high. Colors are vivid, print quality is high. However, printing speed is relatively low. A lower curing temperature is needed, otherwise the substrate may be deformed. The heat applied in the printing zone removes water and fixes the image to the substrate. Print-quality defects such as banding, bleeding and coalescence may occur. Thermal marks may be seen on the substrate; they may appear as vertical bands in some colors. The substrate may wrinkle on the platen, causing vertical banding, ink smears or substrate jams. Curing is needed to coalesce the latex, creating a polymeric film which acts as a protective layer, while at the same time removing the remaining co-solvents from the print. Curing is vital to ensure the durability of the printed images. The print may emerge not fully polymerized, so that the ink smears when rubbed. The print may appear wet, after printing or later. You may need to increase the number of passes to achieve adequate curing. The substrate may wrinkle under the curing module, causing defects such as blisters or liner detachment. The substrate wrinkles may also cause vertical banding or ink smears at the beginning of the following plot. Airflow helps to remove the evaporated water from the print zone and thus allows more efficient drying. In general, use the substrate family default value. Substrate settings ENWW Add a new substrate 43