Quantcast

Blogs

    Hardware Tips

  • Keep your PC's internals and externals in tiptop shape by following the sage advice of Contributing Editor Kirk Steers.
  • Subscribe to this blog

Hardware Tips: Make Your Ink Jet Printer Output Sparkle and Shine

Kirk Steers

It's almost time for holiday greetings. Whether you're reaching out to customers, colleagues, or cousins, be sure that your ink jet printer is ready. These tips will help keep your ink jet running smoothly and its output looking great.

Settle on settings: Get to know your printer's settings by exploring its Properties menu. Click Start, Settings, Printers or Start, Printers and Faxes, depending on your version of Windows. Right-click your printer and select Properties. You should see a selection labeled 'Device Options' or 'Printing Preferences'. Click it to find your printer's Print Quality setting. You'll usually see three modes: Normal, Fast, and Presentation (or High Speed, Normal, and High Quality). The Fast or High Speed setting not only saves time but also stretches the life of your ink cartridge. Use it when quality isn't important.

If you have a color printer, you can speed printing drafts by disabling color matching, or by disabling color printing altogether. For many ink jets, you do so by clicking the Color button under the Graphics tab and changing a setting in the 'Color control' box. Other printers include a gray-scale print option.

For better-quality color printing, check the 'Color rendering intent' setting under the Color button. Verify your color profile under the Color Management tab as well. Windows usually selects the best color profile for your printer, but check with your manufacturer for alternative profiles that are better suited to certain types of paper and other printing situations.

Nudge your nozzles: Ink jets form letters and images by blowing droplets of ink through tiny nozzles onto the paper. Even a slight clog in a nozzle can lead to faint output, blurred text, or unprinted lines running across the page. Many printers have a nozzle-clearing function that blows ink through the nozzles. Use it regularly, especially after long idle periods.

If that doesn't clear out your clogged nozzles, clean them by hand. Dampen a lint-free swab with distilled water and gently wipe the nozzles to remove dried ink. Isopropyl alcohol is a better solvent, but apply it very carefully to avoid damaging other parts of the printhead.

Always shut down your ink jet with its own power switch--not the switch on the surge protector. Many ink jets have a printhead parking function that helps keep nozzles from clogging and is triggered only by the printer's power switch.

Want more information? In October's Windows Tips Scott Dunn tells you how to get the most out of your Windows printer settings, and in April's Home Office Steve Bass shows you how to stretch your printer dollars.

  • Recommend this story?
  • 0 Yes
    0 No

Featured APC Accessories

  • APC Back-UPS ES Safeguards your equipment from damaging surges and spikes that travel along your utility & data lines.
  • APC SurgeArrest Performance Highest level of protection for your professional computers, electronics and connected devices, as well as provides surge protection.

Deal Breakers

Special Offers for PC World Users

Focus on Personal Productivitysponsored by Microsoft

  • Personal Finance 2.0 These free and fee-based Web services not only aggregate data from your online bank accounts, they give you tools for managing your money.
  • High-Tech Travel Tips Plenty of stories provide advice for elite mobile professionals. But what about you, the unproductive traveler?

People who read this also read:

All PC World Blogs

  • 15 Minutes to a Secure Business Get the Secure in 15 toolkit starting with the "15 Minutes Month-at-a-Glance" calendar. McAfee will send you additional tools and tricks to stay protected around the clock.
  • A Buyer's Guide to Data Protection Implementing data protection products and processes can be daunting. Make the right decisions by exploring what is available and what makes sense for your organization. Use this simple guide to evaluate different vendor offerings.

Sponsored Links