Brother PJ-522 Printer User Manual


 
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Operating System Considerations
The following three settings (Modes) can be accessed using the software dialog boxes
and methods discussed below.
In Windows Vista, permanently change the advanced features using “Start:Control
Panel:Printers: Brother PJ-522: Printing Preferences: Advanced or the settings
may be temporarily changed using the “Print Setup” from your application.
In Windows XP / 2000 Professional, permanently change the advanced features using
“Start:Settings:Printers: Brother PJ-522:Printing Preferences:Advanced” or the
settings may be temporarily changed using the “Print Setup” from your application.
As above, “Brother PJ-522” should be changed to match your printer model (“Brother PJ-523”,
Brother PJ-522-BT”, or “Brother PJ-523-BT”).
Density Modes
You can set the print density to your preference from zero to 10. 0 is the lightest,
7 is the default (medium), and 10 is the darkest.
2-ply Mode
For special applications where 2-ply paper is needed, this setting makes prints that are
darker (and print slower) than the density mode set to 10 as listed above.
Form Feed Modes
You can set how the printer ejects paper by using the following options.
Fixed Page Mode - the paper always feeds at the end of a job to complete the
vertical page size specied (i.e., letter, legal, A4, or user-dened size). Use this
with cut sheet paper
End of Page Mode - the printer feeds paper until an “out-of-paper” condition is
found, or a maximum of 356 mm (14’’). Use this with perforated paper.
No Feed Mode - there is no paper feed at the end of a job. This is typically used
with non-perforated roll paper to save paper.
- No Feed Mode Extra Feed - this option is used in conjunction with the No Feed
Mode to eject paper by setting the number of lines to be ejected (at 200-dpi for PJ-
522 or 300-dpi for PJ-523) after the end of a document.
NOTE: The “Extra Feed” mode only affects the last page of a document. The bottom
margin as selected by the application has no effect. The top margin actually
denes the total top and bottom margin between pages of a multi-page job.