LexmarkメーカーM410の使用説明書/サービス説明書
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M410 M412.
Edition: May 2000 The following paragraph does not apply to any country where such provisions are inconsistent with local law: LEXMARK INTERNA TIONAL, INC.
iii Table of Contents Ta b l e o f Contents I n t r o d u c t i o n .............................. i x A b o u tT h i sB o o k .............................................. i x O t h e rI n f o r m a t i o n ..........................................
iv Table of Contents 2 M a r k V i s i o n ............................. 2 5 M a r k V i s i o nP r i n t e rM a n a g e m e n tS o f t w a r e ....................... 2 5 O p e r a t i n gS y s t e m sS u p p o r t e d ...............................
v Table of Contents I n f r a r e dM e n u ............................................. 9 3 L o c a l T a l kM e n u ............................................ 9 6 U S BM e n u ................................................. 9 9 F a xM e n u ....
vi Table of Contents M u l t i p u r p o s eF e e d e rG u i d e l i n e s ............................... 1 4 0 O p e n i n gt h eM u l t i p u r p o s eF e e d e r .............................. 1 4 1 L o a d i n gt h eM u l t i p u r p o s eF e e d e r .
vii Table of Contents 10 F a x .................................... 1 9 7 U n d e r s t a n d i n gt h eF a xP o r t ....................................1 9 7 C h o o s i n gH a r d w a r e .......................................... 1 9 7 S e t t i n gU paF a xP o r t .
viii Table of Contents T y p e f a c e sa n dF o n t s .......................................... 2 3 1 W e i g h ta n dS t y l e .......................................... 2 3 1 P i t c ha n dP o i n tS i z e........................................ 2 3 2 B i t m a p p e da n dS c a l a b l eF o n t s .
ix Introduction Intr oduction About This Book This User ’ s Guide contains information about the Lexmark O p t r aM 4 1 0a n dM 4 1 2l a s e rp r i n t e r s .
x Introduction The P aper Source setting is available in the PA P E R MENU . Other Inf ormation In addition to this User ’ sG u i d e , Lexmark offers the follow- ing sources of information about your printer and other Lexmark products and services.
xi Trademarks T rademarks Lexmark, Lexmark with diamond design, MarkNet, MarkV ision, and Optra are trademarks of Lexmark Inter- national, Inc., register ed in the United States and/or other countries. MarkT rack, Optra Forms, and PictureGrade ar e trade- marks of Lexmark International, Inc.
xii Trademarks The following terms are trademarks or r egistered trade- marks of these companies. Albertus The Monotype Corporation plc. Antique Olive Monsieur Marcel OLIVE Arial The Monotype Corporation plc.
1 Unpacking Your Printer 1 Setting Up Y our Printer Complete the following sections to set up your Lexmark ™ Optra ™ M410 and M412 printers. Unpac king Yo u r P r i n t e r 1 Remove the printer and all items from the packag- ing carton. Save the carton and packing materials in case you need to repack the printer for service or storage.
2 Chapter 1: Setting Up Your Printer Use the following information to help determine where to place your printer . Do not place the printer: – In direct sunlight.
3 Removing Print Cartridge Packaging 2 Raise the upper front door . It remains in place. 3 Grasp the print cartridge by the handgrip..
4 Chapter 1: Setting Up Your Printer 4 Lift the print cartridge up and pull out. 5 Pull up on each end of the plastic piece and then remove the packaging material. Discard all packaging material: the plastic piece, the foam, and the paper connected to the foam.
5 Installing the Print Cartridge Installing the Print Car tridge T o pr epare the print cartridge for printing: 1 Gently shake the print cartridge side-to-side to distribute the toner .
6 Chapter 1: Setting Up Your Printer b Slide the print cartridge straight back into the printer until it snaps into place. 3 Close the upper front door .
7 Loading the Standard Input Tray 2 Press down on the metal plate until it locks into place. The metal plate remains stationary on the inside bottom of the input tray . 3 Press down on the length guide tab with one hand, and with the other hand slide the length guide to the correct position for the size paper you are loading.
8 Chapter 1: Setting Up Your Printer 4 Press down on the width guide tab and slide the width guide to the far right side of the input tray as shown. 5 Flex the sheets back and forth to loosen them, then fan them. Do not fold or crease the paper . Straighten the edges on a level surface.
9 Loading the Standard Input Tray 6 Place the paper against the left side of the input tray and insert it under the metal stop. M a k es u r et h er e c o m m e n d e dp r i n ts i d ei sf a c ed o w n a n dt h ef r o n te d g ei sp l a c e dt o w a r dt h ef r o n to ft h e input tray .
10 Chapter 1: Setting Up Your Printer 8 Push on the right side of the width guide to move it to the left until it lightly touches the edge of the paper . Note: Sliding the width guide too tight against the paper ma y cause misf eeds. 9 Slide the input tray all the way into the printer until it snaps into place.
11 Installing the Paper Bail Installing the Pa p e r B a i l The paper bail helps prevent of fset bin stacking by guid- ing print material into the standar d output bin. The paper bail consists of two parts: a plastic bracket already installed on the printer and a metal bail.
12 Chapter 1: Setting Up Your Printer Connecting Y our Printer to a Computer T o print from your computer , you need to connect your printer to your computer with either a parallel interface cable or a Universal Serial Bus (USB) cable.
13 Connecting Your Printer to a Computer 3 Push the clips at each end of the connector down into the notches on the plug as shown. The clips snap into the notches. 4 Connect the other end of the parallel cable to the back of your computer . T ighten t he scr ews on the parallel cable to the computer .
14 Chapter 1: Setting Up Your Printer Using a USB Cable Y our printer has one standard USB port located on the printer system board. Complete the following steps to connect your printer using a USB cable.
15 Connecting Your Printer to a Computer 12 In the Select a por t f or this printer check box, select the USB port that best describes the order you ’ ve connected USB printers to your com- puter (for example, the first USB printer is USB001, the second USB002, and so on).
16 Chapter 1: Setting Up Your Printer d Insert the compact disc (CD) that came with your printer . e Click Specify a location . f Click Bro wse . g Scroll down until you locate your CD-ROM drive. Double-click to select it. h Highlight the folder for WIN98USB and click OK .
17 Connecting Your Printer to a Computer r Click the Add button. T h en a m eo fy o u rp r i n t e rm o v e st ot h eb o xo n t h er i g h to ft h es c r e e n . s Click Next . The Drivers tab screen displays. t Highlight LPT1 in the top window of the screen for the PostScript language.
18 Chapter 1: Setting Up Your Printer For Macintosh users: 1 Make sure the printer power is Of f (O) and the printer power cord is unplugged from the electri- cal outlet. 2 Connect the end of the USB cable to the port on your computer . 3 Align and plug the other end of the USB cable into the port on the back of your printer as shown.
19 Connecting Your Printer to a Computer The previous scr een displays. Notice the new printer icon. Note: Both areas of the printer dialog bo x show the Optra M410 or Optra M412 printer icons. 16 Click Create . A window appears for you to name the printer .
20 Chapter 1: Setting Up Your Printer Plugging the Printer In 1 Plug the printer power cord into the connector as shown. 2 Plug the other end of the printer power cord into a properly grounded electrical outlet. 3 Continue with “ T urning the Printer Power On ” on page 20.
21 Printing the Menu Settings Page Printing the Menu Settings P age The menu settings page shows current settings for the menus, a list of installed options, and available printer memory . Y ou can use this page to verify that all printer options are pr operly installed and the printer settings are s e tt ow h a ty o uw a n t .
22 Chapter 1: Setting Up Your Printer Installing the Operator P anel Overla y If English is your preferr ed language, continue with “ Installing Printer Drivers and Utilities ” on page 24. If English is not your preferr ed language, complete the fol- lowing steps to customize the operator panel.
23 Changing the Operator Panel Display Language Changing the Operator P anel Displa y Language Complete the following steps to change the language of the menus and messages that appear on the operator panel display: 1 Press the Menu> or <Menu button to enter the menus.
24 Chapter 1: Setting Up Your Printer Installing Printer Drivers and Utilities 1 Locate the Drivers, MarkV ision and Utilities CD that comes with your printer . If your computer does not have a CD-ROM drive, you can transfer the information on the CD to dis- kettes.
25 MarkVision Printer Management Software 2 MarkVision MarkVision Printer Management Software This section provides a brief overview of the MarkV ision printer utility and some of its key features.
26 Chapter 2: MarkVision Lexmark network printers and change network addresses fr om one workstation. Note: Y ou can integrate MarkVision directly into your f avorite network management software . • Use MarkV ision to easily manage and monitor your Lexmark printers.
27 MarkVision for UNIX Networks • Enables print management over your existing intra- net infrastructur e u sing TCP/IP . • Offers a cr oss-platform solution for W i ndows and UNIX users. • Lets you manage multivendor printers. Network users and administrators can also use the follow- ing MarkV ision features to increase pr oductivity .
28 Chapter 2: MarkVision MarkV ision Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) Services let administrators manage popular mul- tivendor printers. MarkV ision for UNIX Networks and Intranet Servers is recommended to assist in r emote printer setup for UNIX platforms.
29 Lexmark NetPnP printer , or visit the Lexmark W eb site at www .lexmark.com. Le xmark NetPnP NetPnP automates the configuration and installation of Lexmark printers on a network. NetPnP senses when a new printer is attached to the network, automatically cre- ates a shared printer object on a W indows NT 4.
30 Chapter 2: MarkVision ers on their workstations with the least amount of effort. • Scripting capability to distribute software to users on the network. IT administrators can store softwar e and driver installation settings in a file. This file can then be used to automatically distribute the software to multiple workstations simultaneously .
31 Solaris Ready Printers for Sun Customers • Prints differ ent forms at differ ent locations from the same database. • Globally updates forms quickly and easily over the LAN. • Provides support for bar codes, color , duplex, multi- page form sets, and more.
32 Chapter 2: MarkVision.
33 Using the Operator Panel and Menus 3 Using the Operator P anel and Men us This chapter contains information about using the operator panel, changing printer settings, and under- standing operator panel menus. Y ou can change most printer settings from your software application or printer driver .
34 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Using the Operator P anel The operator panel, on the front left-side of your printer , has a 2-line by 16-character liquid crystal display (LCD), one printer indicator light, and six buttons. Notice the Menu button is split into two functioning halves; there - fore, it works like two buttons.
35 Using the Operator Panel Operator P anel Buttons Use the operator panel buttons to open a menu, scroll through a list of values, change printer settings, r espond to printer messages, temporarily stop all print activity , and key in a PIN. The following table describes the func- tions of each button.
36 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Select Press the Select button to: • Select the menu sho wn on the second line of the display . Depending on the type of menu, this action: - Opens the menu and displa ys the first item in the menu. - Opens the menu item and displays the def ault setting.
37 Printer Messages Printer Messages The operator panel displays thr ee types of messages: Note: See “ Understanding Printer Messages ” on page 151 f or a complete listing of all the printer messages. • Status messages provide information about the current state of the printer.
38 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Operator P anel Menus A number of menus ar e available to make it easy for you to change printer settings.
39 Operator Panel Menus Printing the Menu Settings P age The menu settings page shows current settings for the menus, a list of installed options, and available printer memory . Y ou can use this page to verify that the printer options are pr operly installed and the printer settings are s e tt ow h a ty o uw a n t .
40 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Changing Menu Settings Y ou can use the operator panel to change printer settings and customize your printer to meet your specific needs. T o select a new value as the default setting: 1 From the Ready state, press Menu> or <Menu to enter the menus.
41 Operator Panel Menus Note: User def ault s ettings remain in eff ect until you sav e new settings or restore the f ac- tor y def aults. 7 Press Select . An asterisk (*) appears beside the value to indicate that it is now the user default setting. The display shows the new setting for one second and then clears.
42 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus 8 The Saved message briefly appears, then Disabling Menus displays. The CONFIG MENU displays again with Pa ne l M en us on the second line. 9 Press Menu> until Exit Config Menu displays on the second line.
43 Operator Panel Menus Overview of Printer Menus Menus or menu items in italics only appear on the displa y if the corresponding option is installed. Capitalized menu items (f or e xample, P APER SIZE) have submen us. See the tab les on the f ollowing pages for a list of the v alues for each menu item.
44 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Pa p e r M en u U s et h eP A P E RM E N Ut od e f i n ea l ls e t t i n g sr e l a t i n gt o print material input and output, as well as the specific print material you are using with your printer .
45 Operator Panel Menus P APER SIZE T ra y 1 Size Tr a y 2 S i z e Each of the abov e menu items suppor t the following v alues as a second menu: A4* (Countr y specific) JIS B5 Letter* (Countr y speci.
46 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus P APER SIZE (continued) Manual P ap Size A4* (Countr y specific) A5 JIS B5 Letter* (Countr y specific) Legal Ex ecutive Universal Manual Env Siz e 7 ¾.
47 Operator Panel Menus P APER TYPE T ra y 1 T ype Tr a y 2 Ty p e Manual P ap T ype Each of the abov e menu items suppor t the following v alues as a second menu: Plain P aper* Card Stock T ransparen.
48 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus P APER TYPE (continued) Manual En v T ype Env elope* Custom T ype 1 Custom T ype 2 Custom T ype 3 Custom T ype 4 Custom T ype 5 Custom T ype 6 The P APER TYPE setting lets you specify the type of print material installed in each paper source.
49 Operator Panel Menus CUST OM TYPES Custom T ype x (where x represents a custom type from 1 to 6) P aper* Card Stock T ransparency Labels Env elope The CUST OM TYPES setting identifies the kind of pr int material used for each of the Custom T ypes av ailable in the P APER TYPE menu item.
50 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus P APER TEXTURE Plain T exture Card Stock T e xt T r nsprncy T ext Labels T exture Bond T exture Env elope T exture Ltrhead T exture Preprint T exture C.
51 Operator Panel Menus P APER WEIGHT Plain Weight CardStock W eight T r nsprncy Weight Labels W eight Bond W e ight Env elope Weight Ltrhead W eight Preprint Weight Colored W eight Custom 1 Weight Cu.
52 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus P APER LENGTH Plain Length CardStock Length T r nsprncy Length Labels Length Bond Length Env elope Length Ltrhead Length Preprint Length Colored Length.
53 Operator Panel Menus Finishing Menu Use the FINISHING MENU to define all settings relating to printer output. Finishing Menu Menu Item V alues Copies 1* … 999 The Copies setting determines the number of copies printed for each page. The printer does not automatically collate the copies.
54 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Separator Sheets None* Between Copies Between Jobs Between P ages Y ou can ha ve the printer inser t b lank separator sheets between jobs, between m ultiple copies of a job , or between each page of a job.
55 Operator Panel Menus Multipage Order Horizontal* Ve r t i c a l Re v Hor izontal Re v V er tical The Multipage Order setting determines the positioning of multiple page images on pages printed using Multipage Print . Y ou may choose one of four diff erent orders.
56 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Multipage View A uto* Long Edge Shor t Edge Use the Multipage View setting to select the orientation of the pr inted page with respect to the page images during Multipage Print . Select Aut o to allow the printer to choose between por trait and landscape positioning.
57 Operator Panel Menus Utilities Menu Use the UTILITIES MENU to print a variety of listings relating to available printer resources, printer settings, and print jobs. Additional menu items let you set up printer ha rdw are an d tro ub les ho ot pr in te r prob le ms.
58 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Fo rmat Flash Y es No F or matting the flash memor y option deletes all resources (f onts, macros , symbol sets) stored in flash memor y and prepares the flash memory card to receive ne w resources.
59 Operator Panel Menus Job Menu Some JOB MENU menu items are available when the printer displays the Ready message and is idle since it is not accepting, formatting, or printing a job.
60 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Job Menu Menu Item V alues Cancel Job Press Select to cancel the current print job. Cancel Job displays only when the printer is processing a print job. CONFIDENTIAL JOB This menu item is not displa yed in the JOB MENU until the printer has processed at least one Confidential Job .
61 Operator Panel Menus CONFIDENTIAL JOB (continued) Once a valid PIN is e ntered, the operator panel displa ys: Y ou ha ve sev eral print or delete options to choose from: • print all jobs • prin.
62 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus CONFIDENTIAL JOB (continued) Print All Jobs If you press Select to choose this v alue, printing star ts and the operator panel e xits this operation. All Confidential Jobs associated with your assigned PIN are printed.
63 Operator Panel Menus CONFIDENTIAL JOB (continued) Delete All Jobs If you press Select to choose this v alue, the message Delete All Jobs. Go/Stop? displays. Y ou hav e one chance to stop the deletion of all the confidential jobs associated with your PIN.
64 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus CONFIDENTIAL JOB (continued) PRINT COPIES If you press Select to choose this v alue, a list of jobs held in printer memor y is displa yed as shown. The first job is displa yed on the second line. All Confidential Jobs associated with your assigned PIN are listed.
65 Operator Panel Menus HELD JOBS This menu item is not displa yed in the JOB MENU until the printer has processed at least one Repeat Print, Reser v e Print, or Ve r i f y P r i n t j o b . Note: Use your software application o rp r i n t e rd r i v e rt o create and send a Repeat Print, Reser v e Print, or Ve r i f y P r i n t j o b .
66 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus HELD JOBS (continued) When y ou create a V erify Print job, the job f or mats , and one cop y of the job prints. Additional requested copies are held in printer memor y . Y ou specify the number of copies y ou want when you send the job from the printer driver .
67 Operator Panel Menus HELD JOBS (continued) Print All Jobs If you press Select to choose this v alue, printing star ts and the operator panel e xits this operation. All Repeat Print, Reser v e Pr int, and V erify Pri nt jobs are printed. The message Queuing Jobs displays .
68 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus HELD JOBS (continued) Delete All Jobs If you press Select to choose this v alue, the message Delete All Jobs. Go/Stop? displays so you ha ve one chance to stop the deletion of all the print jobs you ha ve sent.
69 Operator Panel Menus HELD JOBS (continued) PRINT COPIES If you press Select to choose this v alue, a list of jobs held in printer memor y is displa yed as shown. The first job is displa yed on the second line. All Repeat Print, Reser ve Print, and V erify Pr int jobs are listed.
70 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Reset Printer Press Select to reset the printer . Note: Bef ore selecting Reset Printer , e xit the software application you are using. When you select Reset Printer , the pr inter resets to the user def ault setting for each menu item.
71 Operator Panel Menus Quality Menu Use the QUALITY MENU to change settings affecting the quality of the printed characters and images. Quality Menu Menu Item V alues Print Resolution 300 dpi 600 dpi* 1200 Image Q The Print Resolution setting defines the number of dots printed per inch (dpi).
72 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus T oner Darkness (continued) When y ou first enter T oner Darkness , the operator panel displa ys: Notice the periods ( . ) display ed across the second line of the operator panel. Each period represents one of the numbers 1 through 10 from left to right.
73 Operator Panel Menus Setup Menu Use the SETUP MENU to configure a variety of printer features. Setup Menu Menu Item V alues Printer Language PCL Emulation* PS Emulation The printer language defines how the computer communicates with the printer .
74 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Download T arget RAM* Flash Disk The Download T arget menu item specifies the storage location f or downloaded resources, such as f o nts and macros . Storing downloaded resources in flash memor y or hard disk is permanent storage rather than the temporary storage that RAM provides.
75 Operator Panel Menus A u to Contin ue Disabled* 5 … 255 Set Au to C on t in ue to a value betw een 5 seconds and 255 seconds to have the printer continue printing after it detects one of the f ol.
76 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus P age Protect Off* On Set Pag e P rot ec t to On to make sure an entire page is processed bef ore it is pr inted. This ma y be helpful if you are ha ving trouble printing a page properly because of complex page errors .
77 Operator Panel Menus Alarm Control Off Single* Continuous If you w ant the pr inter alarm to sound any time the printer requires inter v ention, select Single or Continuous . If you select Single , the printer sounds three quick beeps to let y ou know operator intervention is required.
78 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Job Accounting Off* On If Job Accounting is set to On , the installed hard disk option stores statistical information about the most recent printer jobs.
79 Operator Panel Menus PCL Emul Men u Use the PCL EMUL MENU to change printer settings that only affect jobs printed using the PCL emulation printer language. PCL Emul Men u Menu Item V alues Font Source Resident* Download Flash Disk All The Font Source setting deter mines which f onts appear in the Font Name menu.
80 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Pitch (only displa ys for fix ed or monospaced f onts) 0.08 … 100 (in increments of 0.01) (10*) Pitch ref ers to the number of fix ed-space characters in a hor iz ontal inch of type. If you chose a scalab le monospaced font, y ou can select the font pitch.
81 Operator Panel Menus Lines per P age 1 … 255 60* (Countr y specific) 64* (Countr y specific) Use the Lines per Pa g e menu item to change the n umber of lines that print on each page. The Lines per P age setting can range from 1 to 255 lines per page.
82 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus TRA Y RENUMBER Assign MP F eeder Assign T ray 1 Assign T ray 2 Assign Man P aper Assign Man Env Each of the abov e menu items suppor ts the follo wing three values: Off* 0.
83 Operator Panel Menus Po s t S c r i p t M e n u Use the POSTSCRIP T MENU to change settings that only affect jobs printed using the PostScript 3 emulation printer language. Po s t Sc r i p t M e nu Menu Item V alues Print PS Error Off* On Select On to print P ostScr ipt 3 em ulation errors.
84 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Pa r al l e l M e nu Use the P ARALLEL MENU to change settings affecting jobs sent to the printer through the parallel interface con- nection.
85 Operator Panel Menus NP A Mode On Off Au to * NP A is a mode of bidirectional communication that follo ws the conventions defined in Network Printing Alliance Protocol, A Pr inter/Host Control Specification De veloped b y the NP A .N P A mode requires special processing of the print data.
86 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Advanced Status Off On* If Adv anced Status is set to On , bidirectional communication is enabled through the parallel interf ace. Protocol Standard Fa s t b yt e s * Yo u c a n s e l e c t Standard or Fastb ytes protocol for the parallel interf ace.
87 Operator Panel Menus Serial Menu Use the SERIAL MENU to change settings affecting jobs sent to the printer through the serial interface port. SERIAL MENU displays as an option, and appears as SERIAL OP TION 1. SERIAL OP TION 1 is only available if the T ri-Port interface option card is installed and Fax Por t is set to disabled.
88 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Serial Buffer Disabled Au to * 3K to maximum size allo wed Y ou can configure the siz e of the ser ial input b uffer to meet the requirements of y our system.
89 Operator Panel Menus Baud 1200 2400 4800 9600* 19200 38400 57600 115200 This setting lets you select the r ate at which data is being sent to or from your computer . Ref er to the T echnical Reference f or i nf or mation about the range of baud v alues.
90 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Pa r i ty E ve n Odd None* Ignore This setting lets you select the parity for serial input and output data frames. Even The por t e xpects to receive data frames with an e ven n umber of logical 1 ’ sp e r byte .
91 Operator Panel Menus Network Men u Use the NETWORK MENU to change settings affecting jobs sent to the printer through the network port. NETWORK MENU displays as an option, and appears as NETWORK OP TION 1. NETWORK OP TION 1 is only available if an optional print server is installed in your printer .
92 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Network Buffer A uto* 3K to maximum size allo wed Y ou can configure the size of the netw ork input buff er to meet the requirements of your system.
93 Operator Panel Menus Infrared Menu Use the INFRARED MENU to change settings affecting jobs sent to the printer through the infrar ed interface port. If Infrared P or t is set to Disabled , all other menu items in the INFRARED MENU are not available.
94 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus NP A Mode Off Au to * NP A is a mode of bidirectional communication that follo ws the conventions defined in Network Printing Alliance Protocol, A Pr inter/Host Control Specification De veloped b y the NP A .
95 Operator Panel Menus T ransmit Dela y A uto* None 1 … 15 The T ransmit Delay setting defines the amount of time the pr inter m ust wait bef ore trans- mitting meaningful infrared data to the host computer , as well as the amount of time the printer requests the host computer to wait bef ore it transmits infrared data.
96 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus LocalT alk Menu Use the LOCAL T ALK MENU to change settings affecting jobs sent to the printer through the LocalT alk port. If LocalT alk P or t is set to Disabled , all other menu items in t h eL O C A L T A L KM E N Ua r en o ta v a i l a b l e .
97 Operator Panel Menus NP A Mode Off Au to * NP A is a mode of bidirectional communication that follo ws the conventions defined in Network Printing Alliance Protocol, A Pr inter/Host Control Specification De veloped b y the NP A .N P A mode requires special processing of the print data.
98 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus LocalT alk Addr (LocalT alk Node Number) This setting identifies the LocalT alk Node number assigned to the pr inter . It cannot be modified through the operator panel. LocalT alk Zone (Zone name provided by LocalT alk network) This setting deter mines the LocalT alk Zone.
99 Operator Panel Menus USB Menu Use the USB MENU to change settings affecting the Uni- versal Serial Bus (USB) interface port. The USB MENU displays as a standard feature or as an option, and appears.
100 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus NP A Mode On Off Au to * NP A is a mode of bidirectional communication that follo ws the conventions defined in Network Printing Alliance Protocol, A Printer/Host Control Specification Dev eloped by the NP A .
101 Operator Panel Menus Job Buff er ing Off* On This menu item only displa ys if you are using standard USB and ha ve a hard disk option card installed. Job buff ering lets you dela y processing of a pr int job . The job is temporar ily stored on a hard disk option bef ore being pr inted, usually freeing the host computer while the job prints.
102 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Fax M e nu Use the F AX MENU to change settings affecting fax data received by the printer through the serial interface port on the T ri-Port interface option card. W ith the T ri-Port interface option card installed, the printer can receive and print fax data.
103 Operator Panel Menus Fa x Pa r i t y E v e n Odd None* Ignore The Fax Par ity setting lets y ou select the parity f or f ax data frames. Even T h ep o r te x p e c t st or e c e i v ed a t af r a m e sw i t ha ne v e nn u m b e ro fl o g i c a l1 ’ sp e r byte .
104 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus F ax P aper Size A4* (Country specific) A5 JIS B5 Letter* (Countr y specific) Legal Ex ecutive Universal The Fax P aper Size setting lets you specify the size of print material used for printing f ax data.
105 Operator Panel Menus F ax P aper T ype Plain Paper* Card Stock T ransparency Labels Bond Letterhead Preprinted Colored P aper Custom T ype 1 Custom T ype 2 Custom T ype 3 Custom T ype 4 Custom T ype 5 Custom T ype 6 The Fax P aper T ype setting lets you specify the type of print material used for printing f ax data.
106 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Config Menu Y ou only have access to the CONFIG MENU if you f ollow these steps: 1 T urn the printer power Of f (O). 2 Press and hold the Select and Return buttons and turn the printer power On (|). 3 Release the buttons when P erforming Self T est appears on the operator panel display .
107 Operator Panel Menus F actor y Def aults Restore All If you select Restore All : • All downloaded resources (f onts, macros, symbol sets) in printer memor y (RAM) are deleted. (Resources residing in flash memory or on the hard disk option are unaffected.
108 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Understanding Print and Hold Jobs The Print and Hold function lets you delay the printing of a job, print it later , and ask for additional copies. Note: The Print and Hold func- tion requires a total of 8MB or more of memor y .
109 Understanding Print and Hold Jobs • T o delete all Confidential Jobs, see Delete All Jobs on page 63. • T o delete a specific Confidential Job, see DELETE A JOB on page 63. Held Jobs Held Jobs refers any of the following types of jobs: Repeat Print job, Reserve Print job, and V erify Print job.
110 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Ve r i f y P r i n t J o b When you create a V e rify Print job, the job formats, and one copy of the job prints. Additional requested copies are held in printer memory . Y ou specify the number of copies you want when you send the job from the printer driver .
111 Entering a Personal Identification Number (PIN) Printing and Deleting Held Jobs Once you have sent a Repeat Print job, a Reserve Print job, or a V erify Print job from the softwar e application or the printer driver and have selected a value in the HELD JOBS menu item, the jobs are displayed on the operator panel in lists.
112 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus 3 Press Select . The following prompt appears on the display: Enter PIN: =____ Y ou are requir ed to enter the four-digit PIN associ- ated with your Confidential Job next to the equal sign (=). Each digit must be a number from 1 to 6.
113 Print and Hold Formatting Errors Print and Hold Formatting Err ors A lightning bolt symbol displays on the operator panel to indicate a formatting error occurr ed on at least one type of Print and Hold job.
114 Chapter 3: Using the Operator Panel and Menus Once you select PRINT A JOB , DELETE A JOB ,o r PRINT COPIES values in the CONFIDENTIAL JOB menu item or the HELD JOBS menu item, the lightning bolt displays by the value if the currently displayed job experiences a formatting error .
115 Using Print Materials 4 Using Print Materials This chapter provides specifications and guidelines for each type of print material that can be used with your printer , as well as important information about the paper sources and the output bins.
116 Chapter 4: Using Print Materials P aper Sour ces and Sizes The following table details the types and quantities of m e d i ay o uc a nl o a di ne a c ho ft h ep a p e rs o u r c e s .F o rm o r e information about selecting specific print material for use with your printer , see “ Print Material Guidelines ” on page 1 18.
117 Paper Sources and Sizes T h ef o l l o w i n gt a b l el i s t st h ep a p e ra n de n v e l o p es i z e sy o u can use with your printer . P aper and Envelope Dimensions P a per Dimensions En velope Dimensions A4 210 x 297 mm (8.27 x 11.7 in.) 7 3/4 Envelope (Monarch) 98.
118 Chapter 4: Using Print Materials Print Material Guidelines Selecting the appropriate print material (paper , transpar- encies, envelopes, labels, and card stock) for your printer helps you avoid printing problems.
119 Print Material Guidelines T ransparencies Y ou can feed transparencies from the 250-sheet input tray or the multipurpose feeder . T ry a sample of a ny transpar- encies you are considering using with the printer befor e buying large quantities. Do not load transparencies in the optional 500-sheet drawer .
120 Chapter 4: Using Print Materials • Use envelopes that can withstand temperatures of 205 ° C (401 ° F) without sealing, excessive curling, wrinkling, or releasing hazar dous emissions. • Adjust the right paper guide to fit the width of the envelopes.
121 Print Material Guidelines • Use labels that can withstand temperatures of 205 ° C (401 ° F) without sealing, excessive curling, wrin- kling, or releasing hazar dous emissions. • Do not print within 1 mm (0.040 in.) of the edge of the label, of the perforations, or between die-cuts of the label.
122 Chapter 4: Using Print Materials Car d Stock Guidelines Card stock is single ply , and has a large array of pr oper- ties, such as the orientation of paper fibers and texture, that can significantly affect the print quality . T ry a sample of any card stock you are considering using with the printer before pur chasing a large quantity .
123 Storing Print Material Storing Print Material Use the following guidelines for proper print material storage: • For best results, stor e print material in an environ- ment where the temperatur e is approximately 21 ° C (70 ° F) and the relative humidity is 40%.
124 Chapter 4: Using Print Materials Loading Print Material Proper print material loading helps pr event paper jams and helps make your printing trouble-fr ee. Do not remove input trays while a job is printing or while Busy displays on the operator panel.
125 Loading Print Material 2 Press down on the metal plate until it locks into place. The metal plate remains stationary on the inside bottom of the input tray . 3 Move the length guide to the correct position for the size print material you are loading.
126 Chapter 4: Using Print Materials – For the 500-sheet input tray , lift the length guide straight up out of the input tray and replace it in the correct position. Insert the tabs located on each end of the length guide into the slots on the side of the input tray .
127 Loading Print Material 5 Flex the sheets back and forth to loosen them, then fan them. D on o tf o l do rc r e a s et h ep r i n tm a t e r i a l . Straighten the edges on a level surface. 6 Place the print material against the left side of the input tray and insert it under the metal stop.
128 Chapter 4: Using Print Materials 7 Do not exceed the maximum stack height indi- cated by the line under the arrows. Note: Ov erfilling the input tra y ma y cause paper jams. 8 Push on the right side of the width guide to move it to the left until it lightly touches the edge of the print material.
129 Loading Print Material 9 Insert the input tray . Slide the input tray all the way into the printer until it snaps into place. Slide the 500-sheet input tray all the way into the support unit. If an error message displays, see “ Understanding Printer Messages ” on page 151.
130 Chapter 4: Using Print Materials Loading the Multipurpose Feeder Y our printer has one standard multipurpose feeder that holds several sizes and types of print material, such as paper , card stock, transpar encies, postcards, note cards, and envelopes.
131 Loading Print Material 3 Flex the sheets back and forth to loosen them, then fan them. D on o tf o l do rc r e a s et h ep r i n tm a t e r i a l . Straighten the edges on a level surface. Note: Do not load diff erent sizes or types of print material in the multipurpose feeder at the same time.
132 Chapter 4: Using Print Materials 6 Slide the print material into the multipurpose feeder as far as it will go. Do not for ce it. Forcing print material could cause a paper jam. 7 Slide the paper width guide to the left until it lightly touches the edge of the print material.
133 Using the Paper Exits (Output Bins) Using the P aper Exits (Output Bins) Y ou printer has two standard paper exits. The following sections explain how to use the printer output bins. Using the Standar d Output Bin The standard output bin holds 250 sheets of print material and is located on top of the printer .
134 Chapter 4: Using Print Materials Using the Rear Output Bin Y ou may want to use the r ear output bin when you print on differ ent sizes and types of print material, such as paper , card stock, transparencies, postcar ds, note cards, and envelopes.
135 Printing on Letterhead Printing on Letterhead Check with the manufacturer or vendor to determine whether the preprinted letter head you have chosen is acceptable for laser printers. Page orientation is important when printing on letterhead. Use the following table for help when loading letterhead in the paper sources.
136 Chapter 4: Using Print Materials Manual Duple x Printing Manual duplex printing lets you print on both sides of paper and card stock. Manual duplexing does not damage your printer , but print quality and feed reliability may vary when printing on the other side of the page.
137 Avoiding Paper Jams A v oiding Pa p e r J a m s If you follow the tips outlined in “ Print Material Guide- lines ” on page 1 18 and in “ Loading Print Material ” on page 124, you are well on your way to tr ouble-free print- ing. If jams do occur , however , follow the steps outlined in “ Clearing Jams ” on page 183.
138 Chapter 4: Using Print Materials.
139 Multipurpose Feeder 5 Multipurpose Feeder The multipurpose feeder is located on the front of your printer . It can be closed when you are not using it, making the printer more compact.
140 Chapter 5: Multipurpose Feeder When printing from the multipurpose feeder , be sure to set the PA P E R S I Z E and PA P E R T Y P E for the MP Feeder menu item. Also, select the size and paper type from your software application for the print material you have loaded.
141 Opening the Multipurpose Feeder Opening the Multipurpose Feeder T o open the multipurpose feeder door: 1 Push the lower release latch on the front left side to release the multipurpose feeder door . The multipurpose feeder door is the same as the lower front door .
142 Chapter 5: Multipurpose Feeder 2 Locate the metal bar in the recessed area on the multipurpose feeder . 3 Pull the metal bar straight out to extend the multi- purpose feeder . Note: Extend the metal bar to its full-length position to hold longer print mater ial.
143 Loading the Multipurpose Feeder Loading the Multipurpose Feeder Proper loading pr events paper jams and ensures trouble-fr ee printing. The following sections give detailed instructions for loading. Note: Note the recommended print side label on the pr int material package and load print material accordingly .
144 Chapter 5: Multipurpose Feeder 2 Slide the paper width guide to the far right side of t h em u l t i p u r p o s ef e e d e r . 3 Prepare specific print material for loading: – Flex sheets of paper back and forth to loosen them, and then fan them.
145 Loading the Multipurpose Feeder – Fan envelopes back and forth to loosen them. Do not fold or crease the envelopes. Straighten the edges on a level surface. 4 Locate the stack height limiter on the left side of t h em u l t i p u r p o s ef e e d e r .
146 Chapter 5: Multipurpose Feeder 6 Load specific print material: – Load paper with the recommended print side face up and the top edge going in first as shown. Note: Do not e xceed the maxi- mum stack height limiter located on the left side of the multipur- pose f eeder .
147 Loading the Multipurpose Feeder – Load transparencies with the r ecommended p r i n ts i d ef a c eu pa n dt h et o pe d g eg o i n gi nf i r s t as shown. – Load envelopes with the flap side down and the s t a m pa r e ae n dg o i n gi nl a s ta ss h o w n .
148 Chapter 5: Multipurpose Feeder 7 Slide the print material into the multipurpose feeder as far as it will go. Do not for ce it. Forcing print material could cause a paper jam. Note: If env elopes jam while printing, tr y reducing the number of env elopes you load.
149 Using the Multipurpose Feeder Using the Multipurpose Feeder After loading print material in the multipurpose feeder , select the paper source fr om your software application, and then select the paper size and type from both your software application and fr om the operator panel.
150 Chapter 5: Multipurpose Feeder Closing the Multipurpose Feeder When you finish printing with the multipurpose feeder: 1 Remove all print material. 2 Push the metal bar straight back to collapse the multipurpose feeder to its short-length position.
151 Status Messages This chapter describes the various messages that may appear on your operator panel display . Status messages give information about the current state o f the printer . Attendance messages indicate printer errors that you must res ol ve.
152 Chapter 6: Understanding Printer Messages Line 1 Messages Status Message Meaning and Actions Allowed While Messa g e Displa ys Activating Menu Changes The printer is reset to activate a printer setting change. No button actions are possib le while this message displays .
153 Status Messages Deleting Jobs Queuing and Deleting Jobs The printer is deleting one or more Pr int and Hold jobs. This message displa ys if you selected Delete All Jobs or DELETE A JOB , and there are no other print jobs selected fo r pr i nt in g.
154 Chapter 6: Understanding Printer Messages Network Car d Busy The optional inter nal print server is being reset. The Network 1 Setup menu item in the NETWORK MENU is not av ailable while this message displa ys. No button actions are possib le while this message displays .
155 Status Messages Printing Directory List Printing Font List Printing Job Accounting Stat Printing Menu Settings The printer is processing or printing a director y of all files stored in the flash memory option or on the hard disk option. The printer is processing or printing a list of all availab le fonts f or the selected printer language.
156 Chapter 6: Understanding Printer Messages Queuing Jobs Queuing and Deleting Jobs The printer is processing one or more Pr int and Hold jobs selected f or pr inting. This message displa ys if you selected PRINT A JOB , Print All Jobs ,o r PRINT COPIES and no jobs are selected f or deletion.
157 Status Messages Res Reduced <warning> The resolution of the page is reduced from 600 dots per inch (dpi) to 300 dpi to prev ent a 38 Memory Full error. Res Reduced displa ys for the duration of the current job . The printer indicator light blinks while the printer is processing data.
158 Chapter 6: Understanding Printer Messages W arning Messages W arning messages give further information about printer status. The following is an example of a warning message displayed on the operator panel when the printer is in the Ready state: In this example, Tr a y 1 M i s s i n g is the warning message.
159 Attendance Messages Attendance Messages Attendance messages indicate printer errors that you must resolve befor e you can continue printing. The mes- sages are listed in numerical then alphabetical or der . Note: F or paper jam errors, the entire paper path must be cleared of print mater ial.
160 Chapter 6: Understanding Printer Messages 37 Insufficient Collation Area The printer memor y used to store pages of data is too full to collate the rest of the print job . • Press Go to clear the message, print the por tion of the job already in memory , and begin collating the rest of the job .
161 Attendance Messages 38 Memory Full The pr inter is processing data, b ut the memor y used to store pages is full. • Press Go to clear the message and continue printing the job . Howe ver , some data ma y not pr int or ma y not pr int correctly .
162 Chapter 6: Understanding Printer Messages 52 Flash Full There is not enough free space in the flash memory option to store the data that was sent. • Press Go to clear the message and continue printing. Downloaded f onts and macros not pre viously stored in flash memor y are deleted.
163 Attendance Messages 54 Serial Option 1 Error 54 Std Par ENA Connection Lost 54 P ar 1 ENA Connection Lost 54 Ser 1 Fax Connection Lost 54 Network 1 Software Error A serial interface error is detected (fr aming or par ity) on the optional serial por t.
164 Chapter 6: Understanding Printer Messages 55 Insufficient Fax B uffe r The printer link buff er used to process data is too full to receive an incoming f ax.
165 Attendance Messages 58 T oo Many Flash Options The pr inter detects more than one flash option installed. Y our printer can only hav e one flash option installed. • Press Go to clear the error . • T ur n the printer pow er Off (O). Remove the e xtra option.
166 Chapter 6: Understanding Printer Messages 202 P aper Jam Open Rear Door The printer detects a paper jam behind the rear output bin door. Open the rear output bin door and gently remov e the jammed pr int material. Close the rear output bin door . See “ 202 P aper Jam - Open Rear Door ” on page 186 f or more information.
167 Attendance Messages Change <input source> <Custom T ype Name> <size> <type><size> The printer requests a different print material than what is loaded in the tray or set in the P APER SIZE or P APER TYPE menus.
168 Chapter 6: Understanding Printer Messages C h e c kT r a y2 Connection The printer has lost communication with the optional 500-sheet dra wer . Communication ma y be lost if the optional 500-sheet drawer w as remov ed from the printer , for e xample, to clear a paper jam.
169 Attendance Messages Insert T ray 1 This message displa ys when the pr inter needs to select print material from T ra y 1 (250-sheet input tra y). The pr inter is requesting the 250-sheet input tr a y be inser ted so it can continue printing.
170 Chapter 6: Understanding Printer Messages Load <input source> <Custom T ype Name> <size> <type><size> The printer is tr ying to f eed pr int material from an input source it detects is empty .
171 Attendance Messages Load Manual <Custom T ype Name> <size> <type><size> The printer requests print mater ial to be man ually fed from the multipurpose feeder . Line 2 displa ys one of the follo wing items: • <Custom T ype Name> : A user-defined name for custom type 1 through 6.
172 Chapter 6: Understanding Printer Messages Open Rear Door The print material in the multipur pose f eeder is 152.4 mm (6 in.) or less in length and the rear output bin door is not open. When this message displays y ou can: • Open the rear output bin door to let the print material exit.
173 Solving Printer Problems 7 Solving Printer Pr ob lems Sometimes printer problems ar e very easy to solve. When you have a problem, first make sur e that: Note: If an error message dis- pla ys, see “ Understanding Printer Messages ” on page 151.
174 Chapter 7: Solving Printer Problems The tables in this chapter define printing pr oblems that may occur and what you can do to resolve them. If the suggested corrective action does not fix the pr oblem, call your service repr esentative. T urn to the appropriate page for help with your printing problem: Prob lem with.
175 Display Problems Displa y Problems Prob lem Action Menus Disabled status message appears on the displa y . The operator panel menus are disab led. T o enable the menus: • T ur n the printer power Off (O). • Press and hold Select and Return , and then turn the pr inter po wer On (|).
176 Chapter 7: Solving Printer Problems Printing Pr oblems Prob lem Action Job did not print or incorrect characters printed. Make sure the Ready status message appears on the oper ator panel display bef ore you send a job to pr int. Press Go to return the pr inter to the Ready status message.
177 Printing Problems Print mater ial misf eeds or multiple f eeds occur. • Make sure the print material you are using meets the specifications for y our printer . See “ Pr int Material Guidelines ” on page 118 for more inf or mation. • Fle x pr int material before loading it in any of the paper sources .
178 Chapter 7: Solving Printer Problems Print Quality Pr oblems Prob lem Action Print is too light. • Chec k the toner supply . • Change the T oner Darkness setting in the QUALITY ME NU .
179 Print Quality Problems Streaks appear on the page. • The toner may be lo w . Remove the cartr idge . T o utilize the remaining toner , shake the cartr idge gently . Reinstall the same pr int cartr idge. See “ Installing the P rint Ca r trid ge ” on page 5 f or directions.
180 Chapter 7: Solving Printer Problems Option Pr oblems Prob lem Action Option does not operate correctly after it is installed or it quits wor king. • T ur n the printer power Off (O), w ait for about 10 seconds, and turn the printer power On (|).
181 Network Printing Problems Netw ork Printing Pr oblems Option does not operate correctly after it is installed. (continued) Infrared Adapter: If infrared communication stops or does not occur , check the f ollowing: • Communication distance: The distance between the two infrared ports should be 3 meters (10 ft.
182 Chapter 7: Solving Printer Problems Other Pr oblems and Questions Prob lem Action How do I get updated printer drivers or utilities? See “ Introducing MarkVision ” on page 25 for more inf or mation. How do I attach a serial cable to the printer? Y our printer requires an optional adapter to allow serial attachment.
183 Clearing Jams 8 Clearing Jams By carefully selecting print materials and loading them properly , you should be able to avoid most paper jams. If paper jams do occur , complete the steps in the following sections. If paper jams occur fr equently , make sure you see “ A voiding Paper Jams ” on page 137.
184 Chapter 8: Clearing Jams P ossible P aper Jam Areas The following illustration shows the path that print mate- rial travels through the printer . The path varies depending on the input source and exit selection (output bin). The jam areas ar e also shown.
185 Possible Paper Jam Areas 3 Notice that in some instances the ends of the print material are not visible. 4 Gently pull the right side of the print material until the upper right corner is loose. 5 W ith both hands, pull the print material up to the right and then out.
186 Chapter 8: Clearing Jams 202 P aper Jam - Open Rear Door Jams in the following areas cause a 202 attendance mes- sage. Jams in these areas r equire opening the printer r ear output bin door and the upper front door: • The print material jams before r eaching the standard output bin.
187 Possible Paper Jam Areas 2 Determine how to remove the jammed print m a t e r i a lb a s e do nw h a tp a r to ft h ep r i n tm a t e r i a li s visible. – I ft h em i d d l eo ft h es h e e to fp r i n tm a t e r i a li s visible, but not the ends, grasp the print material on both sides and gently pull it straight out toward you.
188 Chapter 8: Clearing Jams – If an end of the print material is visible, pull the p r i n tm a t e r i a ls t r a i g h to u tt o w a r dy o u . Note: T o av oid tearing, pull the jammed print materi al out gently and slowly . 3 Close the rear output bin door .
189 Possible Paper Jam Areas Note: T o clear paper jam attendance messages, y ou must remov e all jammed print material from the paper path. Exiting to the Standard Output Bin Print material jams before it exits completely into the standard output bin.
190 Chapter 8: Clearing Jams 203 P aper Jam - Shor t P aper A 203 attendance message indicates print material less than 152.4 mm (6 in.) in length has attempted to exit the standard output bin. A jam in this area r equires that the r ear output bin door be opened.
191 Possible Paper Jam Areas 2 Remove the print material. If there is r esistance to the print material and it does not move immediately when you pull, stop pulling. Remove the print cartridge, return to the back of the printer , and pull the print material out.
192 Chapter 8: Clearing Jams 250 P aper Jam - Check MP Feeder The print material jams as it enters the printer from the multipurpose feeder . Pull the jammed print material straight out of the multi- purpose feeder toward you. T o avoid tearing, pull the jammed print material out gen- tly and slowly .
193 Ordering a Print Cartridge 9 Maintaining Y our Printer Note: If you are in the U .S. or Canada, call 1-800-438-2468 f or inf or mation about Lexmark A uthor ized Supplies Dealers in your area. In other countries , contact the place where you bought your printer .
194 Chapter 9: Maintaining Your Printer Storing the Print Car tridge Store the print cartridge in the original packaging until yo u are re ady t o in sta ll i t. Do not store the print cartridge in: • T emperatures greater than 40 ° C (104 ° F). • An environment with extr eme changes in humidity or temperature.
195 Cleaning the Printhead Lens Cleaning the Printhead Lens Complete the following steps to clean the printhead lens: 1 T urn the printer power Of f (O). 2 Open the upper and lower front doors. 3 Remove the print cartridge. 4 Gently wipe the printhead lens with a clean, dry lint-free cloth.
196 Chapter 9: Maintaining Your Printer.
197 Understanding the Fax Port 10 Fa x Understanding the Fa x P o r t If your printer has a T ri-Port interface option card installed and the serial interface port is not in use, y ou can use your printer to receive and print fax data. The serial interface port is only available if a T ri-Port inter- face option card is installed in your printer .
198 Chapter 10: Fax Setting Up a Fa x P o r t T o use your printer serial port to process fax data: 1 T urn the printer power Of f (O) and unplug the printer power cord. 2 T urn the modem power Of f and unplug the modem power cord. 3 Disconnect all cables from the back of the printer .
199 Resetting a Fax Port Note: If an error message appears, see “ Understanding Printer Messages ” on page 151. e Press Menu> until Ser Option 1 appears on the second line of the display . f Press Select to choose Ser Option 1 . g Fax Por t appears on the second line.
200 Chapter 10: Fax Disabling a Fa x P o r t T o disable the fax port and restore the printer serial port settings: 1 When Ready displays on the top line of the opera- tor panel display , press Menu> or <Menu to enter the menus. 2 Continue to press Menu> or <Menu until FA X M E N U appears on the first line of the display .
201 Accessing the Printer System Board 11 Memor y and Option Car ds Note: Y o un e e das m a l lP h i l - lips screwdriv er to complete the installation of some options. Y ou can customize your printer memory capacity and con- nectivity . This chapter provides instr uctions for installing and removing each option.
202 Chapter 11: Memory and Option Cards 3 Push the upper release latch to release the upper front door . 4 Push the lower release latch to release the lower front door . 5 Press the latches located inside the front of the printer to release the side door .
203 Accessing the Printer System Board 6 Remove the side door and lay it aside. 7 Loosen the six screws on the shield. Do not remove the screws. Screws Screws.
204 Chapter 11: Memory and Option Cards 8 Use the tabs located on the side of the shield to slide the shield up until the top three screws fit into the three keyholes on the shield. 9 Hold the shield by the tabs and lift it off . 10 Locate the appropriate connector for the option you are installing.
205 Accessing the Printer System Board 11 See the appropriate section for instructions on installing the option. – F o rap r i n t e rm e m o r yo rf l a s hm e m o r yo p t i o n , see “ Installing Memory Options ” on page 207.
206 Chapter 11: Memory and Option Cards Understanding Memory Options Because the steps required to install a printer memory option and a flash memory option card ar e the same, they are gr ouped together in this section. Details about the two option cards follow .
207 Installing Memory Options Installing Memory Options This section offers instructions for installing either a printer memory option or a flash memory option car d. Y ou may install any one of the following memory configu- rations on your printer system board: • One printer memory option.
208 Chapter 11: Memory and Option Cards 4 Unpack the new option card. A void touching the connection points along the edge of the card. Save the p ackaging. W arning! Printer memor y option and flash memor y option cards are easily damaged by static electricity .
209 Installing Memory Options 6 Insert the option card straight into the connector as shown. Make sure the edges of the car d fit into the slots located on each of the connector latches. Note: This illustration is f or the Optra M410. The connector f or the Optra M412 is in ver ted.
210 Chapter 11: Memory and Option Cards Remo ving Memory Options Before removing a memory option, follow the steps under “ Accessing the Printer System Board ” on page 201. W arning! Printer memor y option and flash memor y option cards are easily damaged by static electricity .
211 Understanding Option Cards Understanding Option Car ds Four kinds of option cards are available for your printer: • Internal print server option card • T ri-Port interface option card • Hard disk option • Parallel/USB interface option card Note: Only one option card can be installed in your printer at at i m e .
212 Chapter 11: Memory and Option Cards T ri-P or t Interface Option Card The T ri-Port interface option card lets you connect to: • A LocalT a lk network • Serial interface (RS-232C or Serial RS-422A) • An infrared adapter For information about the LocalT alk network, see “ Local- Ta l k M e n u ” on page 96.
213 Understanding Option Cards Y ou can purchase: • A hard disk with an adapter car d already installed. • Ah a r dd i s kt h a ts u p p o r t sO p t r aF o r m s TM with an adapter card alr eady installed. Refer to Optra Forms for more information.
214 Chapter 11: Memory and Option Cards 2 Push the hard disk securely into the connector . 3 T urn the adapter card over and insert the four screws. Securely tighten each screw .
215 Understanding Option Cards P arallel/USB Interface Option Card The parallel/USB interface option card lets you connect your printer to a parallel interface. Y ou can also use the USB (Universal Serial Bus) port to connect your printer to a computer .
216 Chapter 11: Memory and Option Cards Installing an Option Car d Before installing an option card, follow the steps under “ Accessing the Printer System Board ” on page 201. W arning! T h eo p t i o nc a r di s easily damaged by static elec- tricity .
217 Installing an Option Card 3 Remove the metal plate covering the connector slot. a Locate the two screws on the back of the printer that attach the metal plate to the slot. b Remove and save the two screws. Remove and discard the plate. 4 Unpack the option card.
218 Chapter 11: Memory and Option Cards 7 Insert the two screws saved from the metal plate (or the extra screws shipped with the option card) into the holes on either side of the connector slot. 8 Gently tighten the screws to secure the card to the system board.
219 Removing an Option Card Remo ving an Option Car d Before removing an option car d, follow the steps under “ Accessing the Printer System Board ” on page 201. W arning! T h eo p t i o nc a r di s easily damaged by static elec- tricity . T ouch something metal bef ore you touch the card.
220 Chapter 11: Memory and Option Cards Closing the Printer System Boar d After you have installed all of your options on the printer system board, r eattach the shield and close the side door: 1 Grasp the shield by the tabs and align the three keyholes on the shield with the top three screws on the side of the printer .
221 Closing the Printer System Board 4 Hold the side door slightly to the left of the printer and place the latches located on the back edge of the side door against the metal shield. The edge of the metal shield fits into the latches. The top latch fits inside the back of the printer .
222 Chapter 11: Memory and Option Cards.
223 Installing the Optional Drawer 12 Optional 500-Sheet Dra wer Decide on a location to set the support unit. The printer will be placed on top of it , so allow enough space for easy paper a c c e s s .T h el o c a t i o nm u s tb es t u r d ya n dl a r g ee n o u g ht o accommodate the printer and the optional 500-sheet drawer .
224 Chapter 12: Optional 500-Sheet Drawer 5 Pull the input tray out of the support unit. Remove any packing material and tape fro m the input tray . 6 Grasp the support unit on each side at opposite corners and move it to the location being used.
225 Installing the Optional Drawer 9 Place the printer on top of the support unit. Make sure the edges of the printer and the support unit are aligned pr operly . 10 Load print material in the input tray . See “ Loading Print Material ” on page 124 for more information.
226 Chapter 12: Optional 500-Sheet Drawer.
227 Connecting the Cable and Using the Infrared Adapter 13 Infrared Adapter Y ou can use an infrared adapter to print remotely to an IrDA-compatible computer equipped with an infrared port. The T ri-Port i nterface option car d, which includes an infrared port, lets you connect the infrared adapter to your printer .
228 Chapter 13: Infrared Adapter 3 Plug the adapter cable into the infrared port. 4 Reconnect the printer power cord to a properly grounded electrical outlet. If any light on the infrared adapter comes on when the printer is plugged in, the adapter is connected to the port correctly .
229 Printing the Menu Settings Page 14 V erifying the Installation of Options Y ou can verify that printer options are pr operly installed by printing a menu settings page. A menu settings page lists: • All printer settings in the operator panel menus and their default values.
230 Chapter 14: Verifying the Installation of Options T o print a menu settings page: 1 Make sure the printer power is On (|) and the Ready status message appears on the display . If you need help, see “ Using the Operator Panel ” on page 34 to identify the display and operator panel buttons.
231 Appendix A: Understanding Fonts A Under standing Fonts This appendix contains basic information about fonts, their characteristics, and the specific fonts available in P C L6a n dP o s t S c r i p t3e m u l a t i o n s . T ypefaces and Fonts A font is a set of characters and symbols created with a dis- tinct design.
232 Appendix A: Understanding Fonts Style refers to other typeface modifications, such as tilt or character width. Italic and oblique are styles wher e the characters are tilted. Narr ow , condensed and extended are three common styles that modify the character widths.
233 Appendix A: Understanding Fonts In proportional (or typographic ) fonts, every character can have a differ ent width. Since proportional fonts have char- acters with differ ent widths, the font size is specified in point size, not pitch. Point size refers to the height of the characters in the font.
234 Appendix A: Understanding Fonts Bitmapped and Scalable Fonts The printer uses both bitmapped and scalable fonts. Bitmapped fonts are stor ed in printer memory as pre- defined patterns of bits that repr esent a typeface at a spe- cific size, style and resolution.
235 Appendix A: Understanding Fonts Resident Fonts Y our printer is equipped with resident fonts stor ed perma- nently in printer memory . Differ ent fonts are available in P C L6a n dP o s t S c r i p t3e m u l a t i o n s .S o m eo ft h em o s tp o p - ular typefaces, like Courier and T imes New Roman, are available for all printer languages.
236 Appendix A: Understanding Fonts Coronet Coronet-Regular CourierPS Cour ier CourierPS Oblique Courier-Oblique CourierPS Bold Courier-Bold CourierPS Bold Italic Courier-BoldOblique CG Omega CG Omega.
237 Appendix A: Understanding Fonts Univers Medium Intl-Univers-Medium Univers Medium Italic Intl-Univers-MediumItalic Univers Bold Intl-Univers-Bold Univers Bold Italic Intl-Univers-BoldItalic Courie.
238 Appendix A: Understanding Fonts Times Bold Times-Bold Times Bold Italic Times-BoldItalic Times New Roman TimesNewRomanPSMT Times New Roman Italic TimesNewRomanPS-ItalicMT Times New Roman Bold Time.
239 Appendix A: Understanding Fonts Symbol Sets A symbol set is the collection of alphabetic and numeric characters, punctuation, and special characters available in the font you select. Symbol sets support the requir e- ments for differ ent languages or specific applications, such as math symbols used for scientific text.
240 Appendix A: Understanding Fonts ISO 69: F rench ISO 84: P or tuguese ISO 85: Spanish ISO 8859-1 Latin 1 (ECMA-94) ISO 8859-2 Latin 2 ISO 8859-5 Latin/Cyrillic ISO 8859-7 Latin/Greek ISO 8859-9 Lat.
241 Appendix A: Understanding Fonts Downloadab le Fonts Y ou can download scalable fonts in PostScript 3 emulation and either scalable or bitmapped fonts in PCL 6 emula- tion. Fonts can be downloaded to printer memory or to a flash memory option or hard disk option.
242 Appendix A: Understanding Fonts Printing a Font Sample List T o print samples of all the fonts currently available for your printer: 1 Make sure the printer power is On (|) and the Ready status message appears on the display . 2 Press Menu> or <Menu to enter the menus.
243 Appendix B: Notices B Notices Electr onic Emissions Notices Electronic emission information for your printer varies, depending on whether or not you have an optional network adapter installed. Wa r n in g W ith a network adapter installed, this is a Class A product.
244 Appendix B: Notices T o assure compliance with FCC regulations on electr omagnetic interference for a Class B computing device, use a properly shielded and grounded cable such as Lexmark part number 1329605 for parallel and 12A2405 for USB.
245 Appendix B: Notices With a Network Adapter Installed Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Compliance Information Statement The Lexmark Optra M410n and M412n laser printers, T ype 4045, have been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules.
246 Appendix B: Notices The United Kingdom T elecommunications Act 1984 This apparatus is approved under the appr oval number NS/G/1234/J/100003 for the indirect connections to the public telecommunicatio ns s ystems in the United Kingdom.
247 Appendix B: Notices Laser Notices The following laser notice labels may be affi xed to this printer as shown: Laser Advisory Label.
248 Appendix B: Notices Class 1 Laser Statement Label Laser Notice The printer is certified in the U.S. to conform to the requir ements of DHHS 21 CFR Subchapter J for Class I (1) laser products, and elsewhere is certified as a Class I laser product conforming to the requir ements of IEC 60825-1.
249 Appendix B: Notices A vis relatif à l ’ utilisation de laser P o u rl e sE t a t s - U n i s:c e t t ei m p r i m a n t ee s tc e r t i f i é ec o n f o r m ea u xp r o v i s i o n sD H H S2 1 CFR alin é a J concernant les produits laser de Classe I (1).
250 Appendix B: Notices Lasermeddelelse Printeren er godkendt som et Klasse I-laserprodukt, i overenstemmelse med kravene i IEC 60825-1. Klasse I-laserprodukter betragtes ikke som farlige.
251 Appendix B: Notices Av í ss o b r ee ll à ser Segons ha estat certificat als Estats Units, aquesta impressora compleix els requisits de DHHS 21 CFR, apartat J, pels productes l à ser de classe I (1), i segons ha estat certificat en altres llocs, é su np r o d u c t el à ser de classe I que compleix els requisits d ’ IEC 60825-1.
252 Appendix B: Notices.
253 Appendix C: Safety Information C Saf ety Inf ormation Safety Inf o rmation • If your product is NOT marked with this symbol , it MUST be connected to an electrical outlet that is properly grounded. • The power cord must be connected to an electrical outlet that is near the prod- uct and easily accessible.
254 Appendix C: Safety Information Consignes de s é curit é • Si le symbole n'appara î t P AS sur votre produit, ce dernier DOIT ê tre branch é s u ru n ep r i s ed ec o u r a n tm i s e à la terre. • Le c â ble d'alimentation doit ê tre connect éà une prise de courant plac é ep r è s du produit et facilement accessible.
255 Appendix C: Safety Information Sicherheitshinweise • Falls der Drucker nicht mit diesem Symbol markiert ist, mu ß er an eine ordnungsgem äß geer dete Steckdose angeschlossen werden. • Das Netzkabel mu ß an eine Steckdose angeschlossen werden, die sich in der N ä he des Ger ä ts befindet und leicht zug ä nglich ist.
256 Appendix C: Safety Information V eiligheidsvoor schriften • Zorg ervoor dat uw produkt is aangesloten op een geaar d stopcontact als het produkt NIET is gemarkeerd met det symbool . • Het netsnoer moet worden aangesloten op een gemakkelijk bereikbaar stop- c o n t a c ti nd eb u u r tv a nh e tp r o d u k t .
257 Appendix C: Safety Information Sikkerhetsinformasjon • Hvis produktet ditt ikke er merket med dette symbolet, , m å det bare kobles til en stikkontakt som er jordet. • Ledningen m å v æ re koblet til en stikkontakt n æ r pr oduktet. Stikkontakten m å v æ re lett tilgjengelig.
258 Appendix C: Safety Information Informaci ó de Seguretat • Si el vostre pr oducte NO est à marcat amb el s í mbol , S ’ HAUR À de con- nectar a una presa el è ctrica de terra. • E lc a b l ed ep o t è ncia s ’ haur à de connectar a una presa de corrent pr opera al producte i f à cilment accessible.
259 Appendix C: Safety Information Informa çõ es de Seguran ç a • Se o produto N Ã Oe s t i v e rm a r c a d oc o me s t es í mbolo, , é necess á rio lig á -lo a uma tomada com liga çã o à terra. • O cabo deve ser ligado a uma tomada localizada perto do pr oduto e facilmente acess í vel.
260 Appendix C: Safety Information.
261 Appendix C: Safety Information.
262 Appendix C: Safety Information.
263 Appendix C: Safety Information.
264 Appendix C: Safety Information.
265 Appendix D: Warranty D Wa r r a n t y Statement of Limited W arranty Lexmark International, Inc., Lexington, KY This warranty applies to the United States and Canada. For customers outside the U.S. and Canada, refer to the country-specific warranty information that came with your printer .
266 Appendix D: Warranty W arranty Service The warranty period is 12 months and starts on the date of original purchase as shown o nt h ep u r c h a s er e c e i p t . T o obtain warranty service you may be required to present pr oof of orig inal pur chase.
267 Appendix D: Warranty Limitation of Liability Y our sole remedy under this Statement of Limited W arranty is set forth in this section. For any claim concerning performance or nonperformance of Lex.
268 Appendix D: Warranty.
269 Glossary Glossar y Numerics 7 3/4 Envelope. See Monar ch . 9 Envelope. An envelope measuring 98.4 x 225.4 mm (3.875 x 8.875 in.). 10 Envelope. See Com-10 . 500-sheet optional drawer. An optional input tray and drawer you can purchase for the printer to increase input capacity.
270 Glossary attendance message. An operator panel message that describes a printer problem. Operator intervention is required before the printer can continue processing. automated fax system. A Lexmark system for providing customers with quick product information, technical tips, and printer driver information.
271 Glossary Busy. A printer state in which the printer is processing data or printing pages. byte. Ag r o u po fe i g h tb i n a r yd i g i t sp r o c e s s e da sau n i t . Typically used to represent an alphanumeric character. C C5. Envelope measuring 162 x 229 mm (6.
272 Glossary Data Terminal Ready (DTR). A “ handshaking ” signal contained in a serial interface indicating the device is ready to exchange information. default. An attribute, value, or setting that is assumed when none is explicitly specified. disk.
273 Glossary Ethernet. A network with a bus topology that utilizes carrier sense multiple access with collision detection (CSMA/CD). An Ethernet network m ay be installed using a n yo ft h r e ec a b .
274 Glossary font. A family or set of characters that have common visual characteristics, such as size, weight, and style; for example, Arial Bold. fuser. The part of the printer that uses heat and pressure to make toner adhere to the print material. G grain.
275 Glossary input source. A printer tray or the multipurpose feeder. An input source holds print material for printing. Integrated Network Option. See print server . interface. The connection between the computer and the printer. internal network adapter (INA).
276 Glossary lines per page (lpp). The number of lines of text that can be printed on one page. link. The connection between the computer system or local area network and the printer. liquid crystal display (LCD). The display technology that shows operator panel messages and menu selections.
277 Glossary menu. A list of choices that control printer operation, printer features, and the appearance of the printed page. menu item. See setting . Monarch. Also called a 7 3/4 Envelope. An envelope measuring 98.4 x 190.5 mm (3.875 x 7.5 in.). monospaced font.
278 Glossary operator panel. The buttons and liquid crystal display (LCD) on the printer that are used to change printer settings and display printer status. operator panel display. The liquid crystal display on the operator panel that shows printer menus and messages.
279 Glossary paper type. A printer setting that defines the type of print material (plain paper, card stock, transparency, label, bond, letterhead, preprinted, colored paper, envelope, or custom) loaded in a specified input source. parallel interface.
280 Glossary precharger wire. A wire inside the print unit that electrically charges the photoconductor during the printing process. Print and Hold job. Ap r i n tj o bs e n tf r o my o u rs o f t w a r e application, stored in printer memory, and accessed at a later time from the CONFIDENTIAL JOB menu item or the HELD JOBS menu item.
281 Glossary R RAM. See random access memory . random access memory (RAM). Memory that allows rapid storage and retrieval of data. RAM contents are erased when electrical power is turned off. Ready. A printer state in which the printer can receive, process, and print data.
282 Glossary single-sided printing. Printing on only one side of a sheet of print material (simplex printing). SmartSwitch. A printer function that automatically switches the printer language to match that of the current print job. software application.
283 Glossary Tri-Port interface option card. An optional card you can install inside the printer to add support for LocalTalk, serial, and infrared interfaces. TrueType fonts. Fonts that use a single font outline for both screen display and printing. You can use TrueType fonts in Windows applications and scale them to any height.
284 Glossary W watermark. See overlay . weight. The thickness of the typeface line or the thickness of print material..
285 Index Inde x Numerics 250-sheet input tray loading 124 removing 124 500-sheet drawer installing 223 500-sheet input tray 225 printer on top of 225 support unit 224 support unit parts 224 500-sheet.
286 Index attendance messages (continued) Held Jobs may be lost. Go/Stop? 160 Insert Tray 1 169 Install Tray 2 or Cancel Job 169 Load <input source> 170 Load Manual 171 No Jobs Found.
287 Index D Data Bits (Serial Menu) 89 default settings factory 38, 57 user 38, 40 Defragment Flash (Utilities Menu) 58 dimensions envelope 117 paper 117 disabling fax 200 operator panel menus 41 disk.
288 Index flash memory option (continued) removing 210 setting as download target 74 Font Name (PCL Emul Menu) 79 Font Priority (PostScript Menu) 83 font samples, printing 57, 242 Font Source (PCL Emu.
289 Index Infrared Menu (continued) PS SmartSwitch 93 Transmit Delay 95 Window Size 94 Infrared Port (Infrared Menu) 93 input source, wrong 177 input tray See tray installing 500-sheet drawer 223 best.
290 Index loading envelopes 145, 147 letterhead 146 multipurpose feeder 130, 143 paper 6, 144, 146 transparencies 144, 147 tray 1 6, 124 tray 2 124 LocalTalk Addr (LocalTalk Menu) 98 LocalTalk Buffer .
291 Index messages (continued) status 37, 151 warning 37, 158 Multipage Border (Finishing Menu) 56 Multipage Order (Finishing Menu) 55 Multipage Print (Finishing Menu) 54 Multipage View (Finishing Men.
292 Index option card installing 216 removing 219 option problems operating incorrectly 180, 181 quits working 180 options flash memory 206 hard disk 212 internal print server 211 parallel/USB interfa.
293 Index paper sources (continued) tray 2 124 PAPER TEXTURE (Paper Menu) 50 PAPER TYPE (Paper Menu) 47 PAPER WEIGHT (Paper Menu) 51 Parallel Buffer (Parallel Menu) 85 parallel cable attaching 12 part.
294 Index print cartridge installing 5 ordering 193 part numbers 193 removing 2 replacing 194 storage 194 unpacking 2 Print Directory (Utilities Menu) 57 Print Fonts (Utilities Menu) 57 print job, can.
295 Index printer (continued) status messages See status messages taking offline 35, 36 unpacking 1 warning messages See warning messages Printer Language (Setup Menu) 73 printer memory option 206 ins.
296 Index problem solving (continued) operator panel blank 175 diamonds 175 menu settings, no effect 175 Menus Disabled 175 options operating incorrectly 180, 181 quits working 180 paper jams avoiding.
297 Index removing flash memory option 210 hard disk option 219 internal print server 219 option card 219 parallel/USB interface option card 219 print cartridge 2 printer memory option 210 side cover .
298 Index sources of information, online documents Card Stock & Label Guide x T echnical Reference x stack height indicator 9, 128 stack height limiter 131, 145, 146 standard output bin 133 statis.
299 Index tray capacity 116 linking 48, 135 loading tray 1 124 loading tray 2 124 media specifications 116 paper size indicators 7 renumbering 82 TRAY RENUMBER (PCL Emul Menu) 82 Tri-Port interface op.
300 Index.
デバイスLexmark M410の購入後に(又は購入する前であっても)重要なポイントは、説明書をよく読むことです。その単純な理由はいくつかあります:
Lexmark M410をまだ購入していないなら、この製品の基本情報を理解する良い機会です。まずは上にある説明書の最初のページをご覧ください。そこにはLexmark M410の技術情報の概要が記載されているはずです。デバイスがあなたのニーズを満たすかどうかは、ここで確認しましょう。Lexmark M410の取扱説明書の次のページをよく読むことにより、製品の全機能やその取り扱いに関する情報を知ることができます。Lexmark M410で得られた情報は、きっとあなたの購入の決断を手助けしてくれることでしょう。
Lexmark M410を既にお持ちだが、まだ読んでいない場合は、上記の理由によりそれを行うべきです。そうすることにより機能を適切に使用しているか、又はLexmark M410の不適切な取り扱いによりその寿命を短くする危険を犯していないかどうかを知ることができます。
ですが、ユーザガイドが果たす重要な役割の一つは、Lexmark M410に関する問題の解決を支援することです。そこにはほとんどの場合、トラブルシューティング、すなわちLexmark M410デバイスで最もよく起こりうる故障・不良とそれらの対処法についてのアドバイスを見つけることができるはずです。たとえ問題を解決できなかった場合でも、説明書にはカスタマー・サービスセンター又は最寄りのサービスセンターへの問い合わせ先等、次の対処法についての指示があるはずです。