andrew_barrette
Newbie to Printing
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2022
- Messages
- 8
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 3
- Printer Model
- ET-2800
Hi all.
I am trying to print very small features. No problem I figured, since lots of printers claim very good resolutions. So I bought an Epson ET-2800 because it's print resolution was spec'd at 5760DPI. I thought that this meant that the printer could print features at that scale. How naive I was. Apparently 5760DPI (4.4um pixel spacing) refers to nothing more than the motor step-size. Otherwise, not only is the drop positioning not as precise as the spec would suggest (perhaps due to vibration, but I can't figure out how to print at arbitrarily slow speed), but also the drop sizes are much larger than the pixel size.
I made a test pattern consisting of alternating bands with band sizes of 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, and 64 pixels, and printed it on glossy photo paper at 5760 DPI. The band edges are cleaner for horizontal orientation, and are impossible to see by the band size is down to around 8px. So based on that I would say that the printer is performing at 10x it's spec'd resolution. How is this legal?
I see that some printer specs will show the minimum droplet size in picoliters, and I could calculate the drop diameter from this, but come on! Most printer specsheets don't even show this, and I still wouldn't know how large the drop becomes when it splatters. In my test it looks like the droplets are ~8px across or 35.2um, consistent with the true print resolution being 720 DPI.
View attachment 14982
Anyway, I feel like I'm in the dark now. How do I know a printer's true minimum feature size based on it's spec sheet? Are there certain keywords or printer styles that I should be looking out for? Is there someone who does print resolution comparisons for various printer models? Should I be talking to a sales person at the printer company at this point? I am just a hobbyist so wasn't sure what I would find in the consumer printers market.
I am trying to print very small features. No problem I figured, since lots of printers claim very good resolutions. So I bought an Epson ET-2800 because it's print resolution was spec'd at 5760DPI. I thought that this meant that the printer could print features at that scale. How naive I was. Apparently 5760DPI (4.4um pixel spacing) refers to nothing more than the motor step-size. Otherwise, not only is the drop positioning not as precise as the spec would suggest (perhaps due to vibration, but I can't figure out how to print at arbitrarily slow speed), but also the drop sizes are much larger than the pixel size.
I made a test pattern consisting of alternating bands with band sizes of 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, and 64 pixels, and printed it on glossy photo paper at 5760 DPI. The band edges are cleaner for horizontal orientation, and are impossible to see by the band size is down to around 8px. So based on that I would say that the printer is performing at 10x it's spec'd resolution. How is this legal?
I see that some printer specs will show the minimum droplet size in picoliters, and I could calculate the drop diameter from this, but come on! Most printer specsheets don't even show this, and I still wouldn't know how large the drop becomes when it splatters. In my test it looks like the droplets are ~8px across or 35.2um, consistent with the true print resolution being 720 DPI.
View attachment 14982
Anyway, I feel like I'm in the dark now. How do I know a printer's true minimum feature size based on it's spec sheet? Are there certain keywords or printer styles that I should be looking out for? Is there someone who does print resolution comparisons for various printer models? Should I be talking to a sales person at the printer company at this point? I am just a hobbyist so wasn't sure what I would find in the consumer printers market.