HP 220 User Manual

Page 46

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5Ć14 Functional Overview

C3187Ć90000

Dot Size
Each dot produced by a 300Ćdpi cartridge has a diameter of 0.0055 in. The dot size must be

larger than 1/300th of an inch (0.0033 in.) so that when a singleĆdotĆwide line is printed, dots

overlap andthe line appears to be continuous.

Too Much Ink
A 600Ćdpi grid contains four times as many dots as a 300Ćdpi grid. This means that four

times as much ink can be laid down on a 600Ćdpi grid. Media cannot absorb that much ink

effectively; it puddles, runs, and dries slowly.

Dot Depletion

To solve the ink problem, sophisticated algorithms produce asymmetrical dot

arrangements to selectively reduce (deplete) the number of dots placed on the addressable

600Ćdpi grid in enhanced mode. (The same happens on the 300Ćdpi grid in draft mode, but to

increase plotting speed.) Dot size is not varied in any of the print modes.

Print Quality

Draft mode

is fast anduses half the ink of true 300Ćdpi resolution. Special algorithms control

dot placement, creating a virtual 300Ćdpi image, rather than skipping every other dot. The

image appears considerably lighter than the true 300Ćdpi print quality.

Final mode

uses true 300Ćdpi resolution. Plotters set to plot on a 300x300Ćdpi grid directly

map 90,000 raster image dots per square inch to 90,000 drops of ink.

Enhanced mode

(on the DesignJet 220) uses addressable 600Ćdpi resolution. This involves

300Ćdpi cartridges on a 600x600Ćdpi grid. Dot depletion results in the same amount of drops

used as in true 300Ćdpi mode. Print quality improves because the dot centers may be located

anywhere on the 600Ćdpi grid. This results in smoother curves, straighter lowĆangle lines,

smoothĆedgedarea fills andeasily readable small text.

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