Ink-jet printers are used for marking stainless steel products.
Printing method that uses nozzles to spray ink droplets onto the paper.
Method of non-impact printing whereby dots of ink are fired at the paper to form characters.
The technology used in today's ink printers. The principal of heating an ink to create a bubble and force it through the jet. The bubble is cooled and then bursts onto a piece of paper. This can occur anywhere from 4000 to 6000 times per second.
In an ink jet printer, a print head sprays one or more colors of ink onto paper to produce output, and the type of methods used to accomplish this has an effect on output quality.
A method of printing in which each letter or symbol is formed by precisely spraying ink onto paper.
A method of printing images using jets that squirt miniscule drops of ink onto a variety of surfaces.
Uses jets of ink droplets driven by digital signals to print the same or variable information directly on paper or filmic materials.
A non-impact printing process in which droplets of ink are projected onto paper or other material, in a computer-determined pattern.
Printer that reproduces by projecting ink onto paper without the mechanical impact of plates.
A printer that uses a tiny stream of ink droplets to create text and images. Ink Jet printers are cheap to buy, but the cost per printed sheet (based upon the ink cartridge refill price) will be higher than that produced by a laser printer.
A type of printing process using a small jet of ink sprayed onto the substrate to create an image.
A method of printing using liquid ink projected a drop at a time against a substrate.
Ink jet printers spit out very tiny spots of ink onto paper. The new Epsom printers delivering 1400 x 700 dpi with improved 6 colour ink cartridges produce exceptional results. Properly profiled they produce proofs that are almost contract proof quality. The fifth and sixth colours are lighter Cyan and Magenta inks.
Method of printing by spraying droplets of ink through computer-controlled nozzles.