In Case The Heater Temperature Is Too Low - MIMAKI TS3-1600 Operation Manual

Color inkjet printer
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Changing the set value of Heater

In case the heater temperature is too low

When solvent ink is used, this may result in printing failures such as beading or banding if the heater
temperature or the ink acceptable amount (the ink limit) is too low.
Beading is a phenomenon that adjacent dots attract each other and join. Beading causes speckled patterns
or stripes along printing passes (banding.)
Example of beading
The area in 100% magenta looks fine. Generally, the area in 70-100% single color is easily affected by the
unevenness of media feed rate. The print shown here, free from unevenness of color in the vicinity of 100%
magenta area, signifies that media feeding has been adjusted properly.
Fine looking print
3
In the blue area (100% magenta + 100% cyan), however, speckled patterns and banding occur. This
banding is a result of beading. If heater temperatures are low or the ink capacity (ink limit) of the media is
low, the first dot does not solidify before the second dot lands on the media. As a result, dots bond to each
other and unevenness or banding occurs.
In order to avoid beading, it is recommended to raise the heater temperatures, to raise the ink capacity (ink
limit) of the media, to adjust the ink volume per dot for the media, to increase the number of printing passes
and decrease the ink amount for one shot, and/or to gain time by scan wait. Change media if none of the
above-mentioned measures works to prevent beading.
Print with banding
3-11

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