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- Newsgroups: comp.periphs.printers
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!sdd.hp.com!hp-cv!hp-pcd!news1.boi.hp.com!ahill
- From: ahill@boi.hp.com (Andy Hill)
- Subject: Re: HP LJ4 paper curl rumors, conspiracies, experiments
- Sender: news@boi.hp.com (News Server Project)
- Message-ID: <C08syK.E1F@boi.hp.com>
- Date: Sat, 2 Jan 1993 20:01:32 GMT
- Distribution: usa
- Reply-To: ahill@boi.hp.com
- References: <1hokp2INNn5@menudo.uh.edu>
- Organization: LaserJets by Bill & Dave
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1.4 PL6]
- Lines: 17
-
- Seung Jin (citew@menudo.uh.edu) wrote:
- > I think that this is proportional to the temperature of the roller and
- > and reciprocal to the speed of the printer.
- And, also, the amount of bending that the paper incurs while it is in the
- heated state.
-
- > In slowest printer, which is HP IIp, the time during which a paper is
- > contacting with the hot roller is much longer.
- It also has a very aggressive paper path
-
- > On the other hand, Canon laser printers (LBX seriers), which uses
- > different technoloty, has much less curling, even though speed is as slow
- > as HP IIp.
- Highly unlikely. The Canon equivalent of the IIP uses an identical
- engine (HP printers all use Canon engines). If you have any evidence
- that Canon laser printers have substantially less curling than HP laser
- printers, we'd all like to see it.
-