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The HP LaserJet 3 printer series was introduced in the 1990s. The total paper capacity is 200 sheets. It is compatible with legal, letter and A4 paper sizes.
"The recommended supplies for the HP LaserJet are the HP LaserJet Black and White print cartridges, HP LaserJet Everyday Papers, and HP LaserJet Business Communication Papers. Additional accessories for the HP LaserJet are the printer cables, cable kits and printer paper handling."
Continuous Forms
The Laserjet 4250dtn supports a large variety of different paper sizes. You can even set up your own custom paper size for use. The printer supports paper sizes from 3x5 inches all the way up to 8.5x14 inches.
Dot Matrix
A dot matrix printer uses continuous, fan-fold paper. Such paper is fed through the printer by pegs on a roller engaging holes along both edges of the paper.
It can print on standard 11" paper and up to 17" paper. Other features include 4 printer trays for high capacity as well as fast speeds of up to 27ppm.
Some printers have multiple ways of feeding paper, for example: # A printer may have a tray for different sizes of paper or multiple types of paper of the same size. # A printer may have the ability to "sheet feed" paper OR use continuous form paper (that's the type with the holes on the side where the paper comes out as one long piece)
Custom gift cards can be made from special polished paper or shiny carton paper. Also a specialized printer is needed. One suggestion would be an HP LaserJet.
A thermal printer and a laser printer are non-impact printers. A dot matrix, that fires pins against an inked roller, and uses a tractor roller to feed continuous paper through the printer, is an example of an impact printer.
The HP LaserJet 5500 printer prints in color and up to 21 pages per minute. It has 96 megabytes of synchronous dynamic access memory which can be extended. It has a graphic display with enhanced help with animated graphics. It can print on paper from 3 x 5 inches up to 12.3 x 18.5 inches.
A laserjet printer has many internal parts. I will briefly go over how a laserjet printer works and the basic parts.Basic parts of a laserjet printer:1. laser unit - beams an electrostatic image onto the drum2. drum (OPC) - rolls the image onto the paper3. toner/ cartridge - toner is used to create the image4. fuser assembly - heats and presses the toner onto the page1. The printer puts a negative charge on the paper.3. The printer's laser spreads a negative electrostatic image onto a positively charged drum (reversing the polarity only where the image is)2. The drum roller with the negatively charged image rolls over the positively charged toner, picking the toner on the image only (opposites attract).3. The paper is then feed to the fuser unit where hot rollers heat up the paper and press the toner onto the paper. Since the toner is partly made up of plastic, the plastic melts and gets pressed to the paper making it adhere permanently.4. The finished product is rolled out.