Everytime that I keep under surveillance my printer print, I am amazed at the speed and exactness..?
Answer:
For most inkjet printers, the print cranium takes roughly half a second to print the strip across a page. On a typical 8 1/2"-wide page, the print organizer operating at 300 dpi deposits at least 2,475 dots across the page. This translates into an average response time of nearly 1/5000th of a second. Quite a technological deed! In the future, however, advance will allow for larger print heads near more nozzles firing at faster frequencies, delivering aboriginal resolutions of up to 1200dpi and print speeds approaching those of current color laser printers (3 to 4 pages per minute within color, 12 to 14ppm in monochrome). In other words, seen better days costs for improving technology.
The printer starts printing it after as it about three fourths of the course through the paper starts coming out. So it appears that it printed it really hasty but in sincerity its not.
The mechanics of a printer cannot be fully explained by reason. Complete penetration requires a 'leap of faith,' which is a hazardous road leading to fundamentalist religion.
brill
Crystal is right
as you know, the printer moves the videotape sideways while the paper is feed, on the print cartridge itself it contains a series of nozzles, an electrical pulse flows through small resistors surrounded by the cartridge at the bottom of respectively colour chamber, the resistor heats some of the ink and creates a bubble of vapor, the bubble expands and pushes the ink to the tip of the nozzle, the bubble forces the ink out of the nozzle and onto the weekly.
and thats how it functions, but all this happen at several millionths of a second.
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