A printer or all-in-one unit that uses static electricity and heat to bond particles of toner to a page to create characters, the same technology used by a copy machine Laser printers are not recommended for fabric printing
A printer that works like a photocopying machine, except that, rather than a paper original, the information to copy is drawn on the drum by a laser Pretty cool
This device uses a laser beam to produce an image on a drum The light of the laser alters the electrical charge on the drum wherever it hits The drum is then rolled through a reservoir of toner, which is picked up by the charged portions of the drum Finally, the toner is transferred to the paper through a combination of heat and pressure
A printer using laser copier technology to produce high-quality printed material from computer data The laser charges an electrostatically sensitive drum to accept carbon based toners The toner is then transferred and fused to paper or transparency material
(Some, but not all Laser Printers have PostScript capabilities ) A hardware device found in most offices that uses laser technology to form an image that is transferred to paper It is toner particles (like a copier) that actually mark the page Laser printers have an attribute of Resolution that is expressed as DPI (dots per inch ) 600 DPI lasers are most common but there are specialized lasers with greater resolution
A type of printer that produces exceptionally high quality copies It works on the same principle as a photocopier, placing a black powder onto paper by using static charge on a rolling drum
While considerably more complex and expensive than most other common printer types, laser printers are capable of producing extremely high-quality text and graphics (including colour) at fantastic speeds At their most basic, laser printers apply an electrostatic charge to a drum inside the printer cartridge A laser or a light-emitting diode then discharges portions of the drum to form the characters or graphics Charged toner attaches itself to these discharged sections A charged piece of paper is passed over the drum, transferring the toner The toner is heated and fused to the sheet
Printer that produces very high quality text and graphics using a laser beam The beam draws the characters as tiny dots- normally 300 or 600 dots per inch- on to a special drum The drum then attracts a fine black powder (called toner) to these dots which is transferred to a sheet of paper The final stage is to heat the toner which melts it on the paper forming a permanent image Laser printers are more expensive than almost any other type of printer, but are generally faster and excellent quality Other types of printer include inkjet and dot-matrix
A computer-driven photocopier that creates an original image of the text or graphics from the output of the computer A computer-controlled laser beam "paints" the desired image inside the photocopier and then prints the image on a sheet of paper
A laser printer scans a laser beam across a photoconductive drum according to the instructions of a computer whose memory holds a bitmapped construction of the image to be printed After the electrostatic image has developed, it is put on paper
A laser printer is a computer printer that produces clear words and pictures by using laser beams. A printer that uses a laser to produce an image on a rotating drum before electrostatically transferring the image to paper
A type of printer that utilizes a laser beam to produce an image on a drum Laser printers produce very high-quality print and are very adept at printing graphics Because laser printers are nonimpact printers, they are much quieter than dot-matrix printers They are also relatively fast, printing from about 4 to 20 pages of text per minute (ppm)
A printer that uses a laser and the electrophotographic method to print a full page at a time The laser is used to "paint" a charged drum with light, to which toner is applied and then transferred onto paper
A non-impact printer which uses a laser beam and toner applied to paper to produce fast, quiet, high density (typically 75 to 1600 dpi or greater) dot matrix images
A high-resolution non-impact printer that uses a variation of the electrophotographic process used in photocopying machines to print text and graphics onto paper A laser printer uses a rotating disc to reflect laser beams onto a photosensitive drum, where the image of the page is converted into an electrostatic charge that attracts and holds the toner A piece of charged paper is then rolled against the drum to transfer the image, and heat is applied to fuse the toner and paper together to create the final image
The image is transferred to a printer roll by a laser, and then a page is printed (like a copier) Resolution is either 300 or 600 dots per inch Speed is 4 pages per minute upward Laser printers are "page printers," so they will not print a page unless the software provides a page-end control code