Total Pageviews

Wednesday, 21 March 2012

Two-sided Document Feeders


Two-sided Document Feeders

    Document feeders that let you use both sides of the paper

There are available ADF's that can process both sides of a document: these are known as two-sided or duplex ADF's. These are further classified as:
- Reversing Automatic Document Feeders (RADF): these scan one side of a page, then flip it and scan the other side.
- Duplexing Automatic Document Feeders (DADF): these scan both sides in one pass. The advantage of the DADF is faster speed for two-sided originals.
These devices are available in all the machines that process documents; naturally they are more expensive than the one-sided ADF's; the duplexing ADF's are more costly than the reversing ADF's but are much faster and are orders of magnitude more reliable.
The design and operation of these devices don't need much explanation. The reversing ADF's can function in two ways: the page can be flipped immediately, making it a one-page-at-a-time process, or a certain number of pages can be scanned on one side and placed in a magazine somewhere, which is flipped over and the documents are then scanned on the other side. (In fact, copiers use this method for two-sided copying: but they have to have two internal magazines, one for the source documents and one for the output documents). The immediate-flip process has one great advantage (which may or may not overcome its obvious speed limitation) in that the two sides of the document always stay together after being scanned; the magazine-style system leads to problems in properly collating the copies, which the scanner software may or may not be able to handle. If all else fails, then an acceptable way to handle this to do two-sided to one-sided copying.
If an auxiliary input slot is provided (i.e., manual ADF) for the magazine-style reversing ADF, there is an obvious and baffling problem to be faced if the placement of the manual sheet is important.
Contrariwise, the duplexing systems involve no special handling of the document: instead, they have two reader devices, one for each side of the document. They have no trouble keeping pages in the right order, as the images are always available together. But unless the control panel and software are very sophisticated, a manual sheet will always be placed after both sides of the original have been processed.
Problems such as these, involving logical rather than physical issues, can be overcome to a greater or lesser extent by the use of appropriate software. Scanned documents can be brought into the proper sequence by laborious cutting & pasting; pages inserted manually can be re-paginated easily; and so forth. For high-volume users, a duplex scanner will eliminate the collating problem and over the long run be more cost-effective than relying on word-processing or page-making software.
Courtesy: http://www.documentfeeder.com

Wednesday, 4 January 2012

NOTE EVERY ONE: All the postings of mine in this whole blog are not my own collection. All are downloaded from internet posted by someone else. I am just doing a favor for blog users to avoid searching everywhere. So none of these are my own videos & pictures, I Am not violating any copy rights law or not any illegal action, am not supposed to do. If anything is against law please notify so that they can be removed.


Photocopier Sales & Service Centre at 
Palghat, Trichur, Malapuram, Kozhikode, 
Wayanad, Kannur, Kasargod 
Contact: 8547348092 
e-mail: shageesh_saki@yahoo.com

A0 Paper Size


Standard Paper Sizes


Standard Paper Sizes
U.S. Name

A (letter)

Legal

B (ledger)

Super B/Super A3

C

D

E
U.S. Size


8.5 x 11 inches

8.5 x 14 inches

11 x 17 inches

13 x 19 inches

17 x 22 inches

22 x 34 inches

34 x 44 inches
Metric Equivalent


216 x 279 mm

216 x 356 mm

279 x 432 mm

330 x 483 mm

432 x 559 mm

559 x 864 mm

864 x 1118 mm

Metric Name

A5

A4

A3

A3+

A2

A1

A0
Metric Size

148 x 210 mm

210 x 297 mm

297 x 420 mm

329 x 483 mm

420 x 594 mm

594 x 841 mm

841 x 1189 mm
U.S. Equivalent

5.8 x 8.3 inches

8.3 x 11.7 inches

11.7 x 16.5 inches

13 x 19 inches

16.5 x 23.4 inches

23.4 x 33.1 inches

33.1 x 46.8 inches

ISO paper sizes (plus rounded inch values)


ISO paper sizes (plus rounded inch values)
Format
A series
B series
C series
Size
mm × mm
in × in
mm × mm
in × in
mm × mm
in × in
0
841 × 1189
33.1 × 46.8
1000 × 1414
39.4 × 55.7
917 × 1297
36.1 × 51.1
1
594 × 841
23.4 × 33.1
707 × 1000
27.8 × 39.4
648 × 917
25.5 × 36.1
2
420 × 594
16.5 × 23.4
500 × 707
19.7 × 27.8
458 × 648
18.0 × 25.5
3
297 × 420
11.7 × 16.5
353 × 500
13.9 × 19.7
324 × 458
12.8 × 18.0
4
210 × 297
8.3 × 11.7
250 × 353
9.8 × 13.9
229 × 324
9.0 × 12.8
5
148 × 210
5.8 × 8.3
176 × 250
6.9 × 9.8
162 × 229
6.4 × 9.0
6
105 × 148
4.1 × 5.8
125 × 176
4.9 × 6.9
114 × 162
4.5 × 6.4
7
74 × 105
2.9 × 4.1
88 × 125
3.5 × 4.9
81 × 114.9
3.2 × 4.5
8
52 × 74
2.0 × 2.9
62 × 88
2.4 × 3.5
57 × 81
2.2 × 3.2
9
37 × 52
1.5 × 2.0
44 × 62
1.7 × 2.4
40 × 57
1.6 × 2.2
10
26 × 37
1.0 × 1.5
31 × 44
1.2 × 1.7
28 × 40
1.1 × 1.6

Thursday, 21 April 2011

A Few Quick Toner Tips

Here are a few quick tips about toner that can help you save money and maximize the use of your laser printers, fax machines, and copiers.

Above all, it is important to realize the difference between ink and toner. Toner is used in all laser printer and copiers and most fax machines and is actually a carbon-based powder. If you're spending too much money on ink, buying equipment that uses toner is a great way to go. Toner machines are slightly more expensive, but in the long-run, you'll save on the cost of printing and that can save you hundreds of dollars and even thousands if you are running a small/ medium business.

 When your machine tells you your toner is empty, here's a hint: it's not. Because your toner is a powder, you can take the cartridge and give it a gentle shake from side to side, causing the toner to redistribute evenly. (Sometimes it gets stuck on the sides.) Get anywhere from 10 to 15% more usage from each cartridge by remembering this tip!