How long does the printer wait for another file, Use ink economically – HP Designjet T1300 ePrinter User Manual

Page 74

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The Mirror Image setting must be the same for all pages.

The Rendering Intent must be the same for all pages.

The Cutter setting must be the same for all pages.

The color adjustment settings must be the same for all pages. See

Color adjustment options

on page 89

.

Pages must be all color, or all grayscale: not some in color and some in grayscale.

All pages must be in one or other of the following two groups (the two groups cannot be mixed in

the same nest):

HP-GL/2, RTL, TIFF, JPEG

PostScript, PDF

JPEG and TIFF pages with resolutions greater than 300 dpi may not nest with other pages in some

cases.

How long does the printer wait for another file?

So that the printer can make the best nest possible, it waits after a file has been received to check

whether a subsequent page will nest with it or with pages already in the queue. This waiting period is

the nest wait time; the factory default nest wait time is 2 minutes. This means that the printer waits for

up to 2 minutes after the last file is received before printing the final nest. You can change this waiting
time from the printer's front panel: press

, then

, then Setup > Job management options

> Nest options > Select wait time. The available range is 1 to 99 minutes.

While the printer is waiting for nesting to time out, it displays the remaining time on the front panel.

Use ink economically

Here are some recommendations for making economical use of ink.

For draft prints, use plain paper and move the print-quality slider to the left end of the scale

('Speed'). For further economy, select custom print quality options, then select Fast and

Economode.

Clean the printheads only when needed, and clean only those printheads that need cleaning.

Cleaning the printheads can be useful, but it uses a small amount of ink.

Leave the printer permanently turned on so that it can maintain the printheads in good condition

automatically. This regular printhead maintenance uses a small amount of ink. However, if it is not

done, the printer may need to use much more ink later to restore the health of the printheads.

Wide prints make more efficient use of ink than narrow prints, because printhead maintenance

uses some ink, and its frequency is related to the number of passes made by the printheads.

Therefore, nesting jobs can save ink as well as saving paper (see

Nest jobs to save roll paper

(T1300 series) on page 65

).

66

Chapter 7 Printing

ENWW

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