Smart Label Developer’s Quick Setup Guide The Printronix T5000 e series of Label Printers
NOTICE This Quick Setup Guide contains a CD-ROM with the following materials: • RFID reference material and industry primers • The User’s Manual • Programmer’s Reference Manuals • Useful utility programs The CD-ROM is located in a plastic pocket in the back cover. Do not discard this guide. If you move or pack the printer in the future, you will need to follow the instructions in this guide.
The Printronix T5000 e series of Thermal Printers Smart Label Developer’s Quick Setup Guide 177393-001A
Software License Agreement CAREFULLY READ THE FOLLOWING TERMS AND CONDITIONS BEFORE USING THIS PRINTER. USING THIS PRINTER INDICATES YOUR ACCEPTANCE OF THESE TERMS AND CONDITIONS. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE TO THESE TERMS AND CONDITIONS, PROMPTLY RETURN THE PRINTER AND ALL ACCOMPANYING HARDWARE AND WRITTEN MATERIALS TO THE PLACE YOU OBTAINED THEM, AND YOUR MONEY WILL BE REFUNDED. Definitions. “Software” shall mean the digitally encoded, machine-readable data and program.
2. IN NO EVENT WILL PRINTRONIX, INC. BE LIABLE FOR LOST PROFITS, LOST DATA, BUSINESS INTERRUPTIONS, OR ANY OTHER DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OF OR INABILITY TO USE THIS PRODUCT, EVEN IF PRINTRONIX, INC. HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES, OR ANY DAMAGES CAUSED BY THE ABUSE OR MANIPULATION OF THE SOFTWARE.
This device complies with part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) this device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. Any change or modification to this product voids the user’s authority to operate it per FCC Part 15 Subpart A Section 15.21 regulations.
This product has been tested and found to comply with the limits for Class A Information Technology Equipment according to European Standard EN 55022. The limits for Class A equipment were derived for commercial and industrial environments to provide reasonable protection against interference with licensed communication equipment. Warning This is a Class A product. In a domestic environment this product may cause radio interference in which case the user may be required to take adequate measures.
Printronix makes no representations or warranties of any kind regarding this material, including, but not limited to, implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. Printronix shall not be held responsible for errors contained herein or any omissions from this material or for any damages, whether direct, indirect, incidental or consequential, in connection with the furnishing, distribution, performance or use of this material.
Table of Contents 1 Smart Label Developer’s Application & Reference Notes13 Overview..............................................................................13 What To Expect When Running Your RFID Application......14 Factors Affecting Smart Label Performance .................14 Overstruck Smart Labels...............................................15 Smart Label Limitations.................................................
Table of Contents Loading Media And Ribbon .................................................29 Loading Roll Media .......................................................29 Loading Ribbon .............................................................34 Printing Adjustments............................................................36 Printhead Pressure Adjustment ....................................36 Printhead Pressure Block Adjustments.........................36 Positioning The Media Sensors ...............
1 Smart Label Developer’s Application & Reference Notes Overview Congratulations on your purchase of the industry’s first Smart Label Developer’s Kit. The intent of this kit is to provide a complete environment for the printing and encoding of RFID smart labels right out of the box. Printronix has specifically designed this kit to help you fast track your RFID pilot through the use of a suite of Software Migration Tools (SMT).
Chapter 1 What To Expect When Running Your RFID Application • • One 450 m thermal premium wax ribbon • • • • • Programming manuals Media starter kit (100 4 inch x 6 inch standard labels, 50 m thermal premium wax ribbon, and a printhead cleaning pen) Smart Label Developer’s Quick Setup Guide (this manual) Application and reference notes (this chapter) Technical support Printronix’s PrintNet® Enterprise: a web-enabled remote network print management system that provides instantaneous visibility to every
Overstruck Smart Labels Overstruck Smart Labels If an RFID tag within a smart label is deemed unacceptable after execution of the defined number of internal retries, the following actions are performed: • If Error Handling is set to Overstrike (the default), the unacceptable smart label will print with a grid Overstrike pattern. If the Label Retry Count is greater than zero (the default is 5), the next smart label will be tried until the label retry count is exhausted.
Chapter 1 Transitioning From UCC/GTIN Applications Using Printronix Soft- Transitioning From UCC/GTIN Applications Using Printronix Software Migration Tools (SMT) It is more than likely that your software is already set up to create barcodes. You may have also spent a lot of time creating compliance label templates & integrating them into your system. The Smart Label Developer’s Kit Software Migration Tools will allow you to effortlessly transition from printing compliance labels to smart labels.
How It Works • EPC: This tool allows EPC data to be directly encoded into the smart label’s RFID tag. Simply have your existing software application write the desired EPC number to a Code 3 of 9 barcode. The printer will then write the EPC data to the RFID tag without printing the bar code. The existing toolset will meet the needs of many RFID early adopters. If you have a requirement for a Software Migration Tool not included in this kit, feel free to contact us.
Chapter 1 Printronix Professional Services Printronix Professional Services What We Can Do Printronix can partner with you on your RFID pilot project to make your existing software applications RFID/smart label capable. We specialize in AutoID Consulting, compliance labeling, third party software integration, and label generation. Contact Information RFID Pilot Manager Stephen Morris 714-368-2486 smorris@printronix.
Reference Material Useful Industry Web Links Reference Material Auto-ID Center www.autoidcenter.org Uniform Code Council www.uc-council.com EPC Global www.uc-council.org/epcglobal/ RFID Journal www.rfidjournal.com For a general overview of RFID technology, please see the Alien Technology RFID Primer located on the CD contained in this manual. (This primer is currently unavailable at time of publication). Alien Technology www.alientechnology.com Advanced Wireless Indentifications www.awid.
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2 Printer Setup Unpacking And Installing The Printer Unpacking The Printer The printer is shipped in a carton and protective bag. Keep all packing material in case shipping is required. CAUTION Avoid touching the electrical connectors to prevent electrostatic discharge damage while setting up the printer. The discharge of accumulated electrostatic energy can damage or destroy the printhead or electronic components used in this device.
Chapter 2 Unpacking And Installing The Printer Removing The Internal Packing Material Remove the tape strips and foam pads from the printer as indicated below. (The top lid of the shipping carton also displays these instructions.
Installation Installation 1. Place the printer on a flat level surface that allows easy access to all sides of the printer. CAUTION Never operate the printer on its side or upside down. 2. Make sure the printer power switch is in the Off (O) position. 3. Install the serial interface adapter onto the serial interface connector (as shown). 4. Plug the serial cable into the serial interface adapter.
Chapter 2 Controls And Indicators WARNING Failure to properly ground the printer may result in electric shock to the operator. In compliance with international safety standards, this printer has been equipped with a three-pronged power cord. Do not use adapter plugs or remove the grounding prong from the cable plug. If an extension cord is required, ensure that a three-wire cable with a properly grounded plug is used. 5. Attach the AC power cord to the AC power receptacle in the back of the printer.
Control Panel Control Panel The control panel is located on the front of the printer and includes an LCD, indicators, and control keys (buttons). These are described in the following tables.
Description Indicates when the printer is online, offline, or when there is a fault condition. A backlighted liquid crystal display with two rows of 16 characters each. Indicates when the printer is receiving or processing data. Indicator Online Status Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) Job In Process During a fault condition, displays the specific fault message and the corrective action. None During a fault condition, displays the specific fault message and the corrective action.
+ - Button INCREMENT Key in Menu mode TEST PRINT Key Pressing the ↵ (ENTER) key with a Diagnostic Test displayed initiates the test. Pressing ↵ again terminates the test. UP Key in Menu mode FEED Key None Advances the media one label length. None JOB SELECT Key DECREMENT Key in Menu mode Sets printer to Offline mode. Function in Online Mode PAUSE Key Toggles the printer between Online and Offline modes. Description Scrolls through the Test Print patterns.
Button 28 Selects the Menu mode. None Takes the printer Offline and selects the Menu mode. None ENTER Key Pressing the ↵ (ENTER) key in Menu mode selects the displayed option or value. An asterisk then appears next to the option or value indicating it has been selected. Note: If the ENTER key is locked, “ENTER SWITCH LOCKED” displays on the LCD for one second. Press the (DOWN) and ↵ (ENTER) keys at the same time to unlock the ENTER key.
Loading Roll Media Loading Media And Ribbon IMPORTANT Printronix recommends using the supplied starter roll of 100 labels to setup and verify printer operation. This will avoid expending the more expensive smart labels for this task. CAUTION DO NOT TOUCH the printhead or the electronic components under the printhead assembly. CAUTION Do not close the pivoting deck without label stock installed between the printhead and the platen, because debris on the platen may damage the printhead.
Chapter 2 Loading Media And Ribbon Media Roll Media Hanger Media Hanger Guide 3. Slide the media width guide close to the outside end of the media damper. 4. Slide the media roll onto and towards the back of the media hanger. 5. Place the media hanger guide under the media hanger and against the lower part of the label core at a 45 degree angle (as shown). This position provides the required tension for a new label roll and the desired drag for a partial label roll.
Loading Roll Media Media and Ribbon Loading Instructions Media Media Damper RFID UHF Encoder 6. Raise the media damper. 7. Route the media as illustrated on the media and ribbon loading instructions (or refer to the arrows on the printer frame). NOTE: The media damper must be raised up and the media must rest on top of the RFID UHF encoder.
Chapter 2 Loading Media And Ribbon Media Sensor Media Guard Fixed Guide Media Width Guide Media Sensor Handle Media Damper 8. Lower the media damper. 9. Verify that the left edge of the media is against the fixed guide on the bottom of the media damper. 10. Push the media width guide in until it is flush with the outer edge of the media. 11. Check the horizontal position of the media sensor, and refer to “Positioning The Media Sensors” on page 37.
Loading Roll Media Media (left edge) Platen (left edge) 12. Align the left (inside) edge of the media with the left straight edge of the platen (rubber drive roller). Pivoting Deck Deck Lock Lever 13. Close the printhead by pressing down on the pivoting deck and rotating the deck lock lever fully counterclockwise. 14. Power on the printer (place the power switch in the | position).
Chapter 2 Loading Media And Ribbon Loading Ribbon Empty Supply Core Ribbon Roll Pivoting Deck Ribbon Supply Spindle Deck Lock Lever 1. Install the empty supply core on the take-up spindle. 2. Slide the ribbon roll onto the ribbon supply spindle until it stops against the spindle flange. 3. Open the pivoting deck by rotating the deck lock lever fully clockwise until the deck swings upward. Printhead Media Rear Ribbon Guide Roller 4.
Loading Ribbon Media Cover Media and Ribbon Loading Instructions Take-up Core Take-up Spindle 5. Route the ribbon using the media and ribbon loading instructions on the media cover (or refer to the arrows on the printer frame). IMPORTANT Do not attach the ribbon to the take-up spindle without a core installed. 6. Attach the ribbon to the fiberboard core on the ribbon take-up spindle using the adhesive on the ribbon leader. 7.
Chapter 2 Printing Adjustments Printing Adjustments Pressure Block Adjustment Scale Right Pressure Block Pointer Lead Screw Knob Left Pressure Block Left Pressure Block Handle Printhead Pressure Adjustment Dial Right Pressure Block Printhead Pressure Adjustment Adjust the printhead pressure to the setting of 4. Printhead Pressure Block Adjustments Left Pressure Block Manually adjust the left block so its handle is aligned with the bold mark on the pressure block adjustment scale.
Positioning The Media Sensors Positioning The Media Sensors Media Sensor Media Sensor Handle (2) Your printer is equipped with upper and lower media sensors that detect the top-of-form position on media with label length indicators (gaps, notches, holes, or black marks). The media sensors also detect Paper Out conditions. Use the handles on the lower media sensor to horizontally position it in the center of the installed media. Slide the upper sensor directly over the lower sensor.
Chapter 2 Saving The Configuration 3. If necessary, press ↓ and ↵ at the same time to unlock the ↵ key. 4. Press ↑ or ↓ until Gap/Mark Sensor / Disable* displays. 5. Press + or – until Gap displays. 6. Press ↵. An asterisk (*) displays next to Gap. 7. Press ↓ until Auto Calibrate/Run Calibrate displays. 8. Press ↵. Media advances until it can accurately detect the label length indicators and then stops at the top-of-form position. The sensed distance value then displays for one second. 9.
Positioning The Media Sensors Run A Barcode Demo Test IMPORTANT Printronix recommends using the supplied starter roll of 100 labels to setup and verify printer operation. This will avoid expending the more expensive smart labels for this task. Before you send an actual print job, run a barcode demo test: 1. Press the PAUSE key until “OFFLINE” displays. 2. Press the TEST PRINT key until “Printer Tests/Barcode Demo” displays. 3. Press ↵. The Barcode Demo test pattern will start and print two barcodes. 4.
Chapter 2 QUICK SETUP Menu QUICK SETUP Menu QUICK SETUP Print Intensity -3* -15 to 15 Print Speed 6 ips* 2-10 ips1 Print Mode Transfer* Direct Media Handling Tear-Off Strip* Tear-Off Peel-Off Cut Paper Feed Shift 0.00 inches* 2 -0.50 to X inches3 Label Length 4 or 6 inches* 2, 4 00.1 to 99.0 inches5 Label Width 4.1, 6.6, or 8.5 inches* 2, 4 00.1 to 8.5 inches4 Ver Image Shift 0.00 inches* 2 -1.00 to X inches3 Hor Image Shift 0.00 inches* 2 -1.00 to 1.
QUICK SETUP Submenus QUICK SETUP (cont. from previous page) SMT: Status SMT: Sel Toolset SMT: Select Tool Disabled* Enabled Toolset [1]* Toolset [1] to Toolset [4] EPC1 zEPC2, 3 GTIN1 zGTIN2, 3 UPCA1 zUPCA2, 3 EAN81 zEAN82, 3 EAN131 zEAN132, 3 UCC1281 zUCC1282, 3 Notes: * = Default. 1 Appears only if Toolset [1] is selected under SMT: Sel Toolset. 2 Appears only if Toolset [2] is selected under SMT: Sel Toolset. 3 Undocumented options are reserved for internal use and future design.
Chapter 2 QUICK SETUP Menu Print Speed Specifies the speed in inches per second (ips) at which the media passes through the printer while printing. The range is 2 through 10 ips (in increments of 1 ips). The default is 6 ips. NOTE: The maximum print speed varies based on maximum printer width and dot per inch (dpi) resolution of the printhead installed (203 or 300 dpi). Print Mode Specifies the type of printing to be done. • • Transfer. Indicates Thermal Transfer printing (ribbon installed). Direct.
QUICK SETUP Submenus after a specified number of labels have been printed using a software cut command. It cuts continuous roll paper, labels, or tag stock. NOTE: This feature is currently not supported using the RFID UHF encoder. • Continuous. Printer prints on the media and sends it out the front. The default is Tear-Off Strip.
Chapter 2 QUICK SETUP Menu Label Width The allowable range in inches is 00.1 to the maximum print width of the printer. The allowable range in millimeters is 2.5 to the maximum width of the printer. Ver Image Shift Specifies the amount to shift an image up (-) or down (+) for precise positioning on the label. The actual height of the image is not affected by this parameter. The allowable range is -1.00 inches to the current Label Length value setting, up to a maximum of 12.80 inches in 0.
QUICK SETUP Submenus • Inv. Portrait. Inverse Portrait refers to vertical page orientation, where the height of a page is greater than its width. The top edge of the image is parallel to the trailing edge of the media. The following example is viewed from the front of the printer. Trailing Edge 4” FEED The top edge of the image is parallel to the trailing edge of the media. 6” Leading Edge • Landscape. Landscape refers to horizontal orientation, where the width of a page is greater than its height.
Chapter 2 QUICK SETUP Menu • Inv. Landscape. Inverse Landscape refers to horizontal orientation, where the width of a page is greater than its height. The top edge of the image is parallel to the right edge of the media. The following example is viewed from the front of the printer. 4” The top edge of the image is parallel to the right edge of the media.
QUICK SETUP Submenus • Advanced Gap. Select when using media that has liner gaps between die cut labels with black background. The top-of-form position is the leading edge of the die cut label (trailing edge of the gap, notch, or hole). • Advanced Notch. Select when using media with notches or holes that interrupt a black vertical line on the underside of the media. The top-of-form position is the leading edge of the die cut label (trailing edge of the gap, notch, or hole). The default is Disable.
Chapter 2 QUICK SETUP Menu • Disabled.The printer will not command the validator to begin scanning and no errors will be reported. The counters will not be incremented while the validator is disabled. NOTE: If you save a configuration with the validator enabled, power down and power up, and the validator is not connected or not functioning, the error message “Validator not communicating” will display briefly. The Validator menu will not display. If the validator is installed, the default is Enable.
QUICK SETUP Submenus SMT: Select Tool This menu appears only if the RFID UHF encoder is installed. See “Software Migration Tools (SMT)” on page 63. • EPC, GTIN, UPCA, EAN8, EAN13, and UCC128. SMTs displayed if Toolset [1] is selected under SMT: Sel Toolset. • zEPC, zGTIN, zUPCA, zEAN8, zEAN13, and zUCC128. SMTs displayed if Toolset [2] is selected under SMT: Sel Toolset. NOTE: Undocumented options are reserved for internal use and future design.
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3 Smart Label Development Overview This chapter describes how to use the T5000e thermal printer RFID UHF encoder. The RFID UHF encoder is designed to be transparent to the printer operation. It provides the capability of programming smart labels (with embedded RFID UHF tags) while printing the label format. The smart labels are provided with the printer or purchased separately from Printronix.
Chapter 3 RFID CONTROL Menu RFID CONTROL Menu RFID CONTROL Reader Enable* Tag Type Class 1* Error Handling Overstrike* Stop Label Retry 5* 0 to 5 3* 0 to 8 Disable None Tag Write Cnt1 Failed Tag Cnt1 Clear Tag Stat RFID Test Auto Retry F/W-Version1 Notes: * = Default. Italicized items are available only when you enable Admin User in the PRINTER CONTROL menu. 1 52 Display item only.
RFID CONTROL Submenus RFID CONTROL Submenus Reader This menu item allows the user to enable or disable the RFID UHF encoder. The default is Enable. Tag Type This menu item allows the user to specify the tag type in use. The default is Class 1. Other classes may be added in the future. Error Handling This menu item allows the user to disable the printing of the Overstrike pattern for a failed label. The default is Overstrike.
Chapter 3 RFID CONTROL Menu Tag Write Cnt This menu item displays the number of tags written since the last Clear Tag Stat operation has been initiated. (See “Clear Tag Stat” below.) Failed Tag Cnt This menu item displays the number of failed tag write attempts since the last Clear Tag Stat operation has been initiated. (See “Clear Tag Stat” below.) Clear Tag Stat This menu item clears the Tag Write Cnt and Failed Tag Cnt menu items when selected.
Write Tag RFID PGL Commands Write Tag Purpose To program non-incremental data into an RFID tag (embedded in the smart label). MODE CREATE Format RFWRITE;[HEX;][EPCm;][RFn;L;][LOCK;]ATp;[(D)datafield(D)] RFWRITE; The RFID Write Tag command. HEX; Optional parameter to indicate that the text in datafield is in hexadecimal format and that it will be converted to binary format. EPCm; Optional parameter to indicate that the data in datafield should be converted to an EPC number.
Chapter 3 RFID PGL Commands datafield is ignored, and dynamic data must be entered via the RF command in the EXECUTE mode. The length of the dynamic data must be equal to L. LOCK; Optional parameter to write-protect the data. Currently not supported. ATp; p specifies the decimal start position where data will be written to the tag. Subsequent bits will be shifted and previous bits are nulled. (D) Delimiter designating the start and end of static data for the RFWRITE field.
Write Tag Example 2 Another version of Example 1 using the HEX parameter. ~CREATE;HELLO RFWRITE;HEX;AT1;*48454C4C4F544147* END ~EXECUTE;HELLO ~NORMAL Example 3 Program a tag using the EPC parameter 1. This results in the tag having the first two bits = 01, next 56 bits with hexadecimal values “01234567890123”, and last 6 bits = 0. ~CREATE;HELLO RFWRITE;EPC1;AT1;*01234567890123* END ~EXECUTE;HELLO ~NORMAL Example 4 Write tag command with dynamic non-incremental data “HELLOTAG”.
Chapter 3 RFID PGL Commands Read Tag Read Tag is not a command, but an element of the ALPHA and BARCODE commands. See “Alphanumerics” and “Bar Codes” in the IGP/PGL Programmer’s Reference Manual for more information. Purpose Embed RFID data into an ALPHA or BARCODE data field. Format position,length[,format]; The RFID Data Indicator character, as defined by the RFREAD parameter in the ALPHA or BARCODE commands. See the ALPHA and/or BARCODE command description for details.
Read Tag BARCODE // The following BARCODE element is defined below: C3/9;RFREAD@;BF1;10;5;5 // Code 3 of 9 bar code; the RFID Data Indicator // character is “@”. PDF // Dynamic bar code field number is 1; display the // readable part. STOP // Terminate the BARCODE element definition. END // Terminate the READTAG form creation.
Chapter 3 RFID PPI1 Commands RFID PPI1 Commands Get Tag Unique ID Purpose Read the unique identification number of the RFID tag (embedded in the smart label). Format ^RI x ^RI Get Tag Unique ID command. x The field number to which the data will be assigned. The default is 0, and other acceptable values range from 1 to 9999. Comments The PPI1 only supports Alien Technology Class 1a tags, which do not have the unique identification numbers. Therefore, the PPI1 absorbs this command.
Read Tag Read Tag Purpose This command allows data from the RFID tag (embedded in the smart label) to merge into any previously defined dynamic data field. It is equivalent to the Field Number command (^FN) except that the data come from the RFID tag. Format ^RT x,startblock,length,hexformat,retriescount,nomotionflag , reservedflag ^RT Read Tag command. x The field number to which the data will be assigned. The default is 0, and other acceptable values range from 1 to 9999.
Chapter 3 RFID PPI1 Commands nomotionflag Set this flag to 1 to read data from the tag without moving the label. The PPI1 does not move the label regardless of the value. The user needs to print something on the label to eject the label. reservedflag This is a reserved flag. The PPI1 absorbs this number. Comments This command is only executed by the demand for data from any dynamic field. The PPI1 absorbs this command if there are no demands for the data.
Tools List meaning the data are not protected. The other acceptable value is 1, meaning the data are protected. The PPI1 absorbs this number and does not protect the data. reservedflag This is a reserved flag. The PPI1 absorbs this number. Software Migration Tools (SMT) There are SMTs for six separate end-use applications supporting both PGL and PPI1 datastreams for a total of 12 tools.
Chapter 3 Software Migration Tools (SMT) • UCC128: Copies data from a UCC-128 bar code with an application identifier (AI) in the range of 90-99 to an RFID tag. These AI’s are reserved for internal applications. The AI is not written to the RFID tag. Data written to the RFID tag is right justified and zero padded. Checksum data calculated by the printer is not encoded onto the tag. Bar code data beyond the 16th digit is truncated without an error message.
Selecting The Tools Selecting The Tools 1. Press .. . until QUICK SETUP displays. 2. If necessary, press ↓ and ↵ at the same time to unlock the ↵ key. 3. Press ↓ until SMT: Sel Toolset displays. 4. Press ↓ until Toolset [1] (PGL emulation) or Toolset [2] (PPI1 emulation) displays. 5. Press ↵ to select it. 6. Press ↓ until SMT: Select Tool displays. 7. Press ↓ until the desired tool displays. 8. Press ↵ to select it. 9.
Chapter 3 Error Messages Error Messages The RFID UHF encoder can detect a number of errors. When one of these errors occurs, the RFID UHF encoder alerts the printer to perform the currently selected error action (see “Error Handling” on page 53) and show the appropriate error message on the printer display. RFID UHF encoder error messages are explained in Table 1. Table 1.
Selecting The Tools Troubleshooting If you are having trouble with the RFID UHF encoder, consult Table 2 for a list of symptoms and possible solutions. Table 2. Troubleshooting the RFID UHF Encoder Symptom No communication between the printer and the reader Solution 1. Make sure the serial interface adapter and the serial cable are plugged into the printer. See “Installation” on page 23. 2. Make sure Reader = Enable in the RFID CONTROL menu. 3.
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Index A I Auto Calibrate Industry web links, 19 option, 47 J running, 37 B Job In Process indicator, 25 L Barcode demo test, 39 C Label Length option, 43 Label Retry, 53 Configuration, saving, 38 Label Width option, 44 Control panel, 25 LCD, 25 E Limitations, 15 Liquid Crystal Display (LCD), 25 Error Handling, 53 Loading Error messages, 66 ribbon, 34 RFID MAX RETRY / Check System, 66 roll media, 29 RFID Reader / Comm Error, 66 M RFID TAG FAILED / Check Media, 66 F Media Handling
Index P RFID TAG FAILED / Check Media, 66 RFID tags, 51 Paper Feed Shift option, 43 RFID UHF encoder, 51 PGL commands, 55 Ribbon, loading, 34 Positioning the media sensor, 37 Roll media, 29 Power switch, 24 Run a barcode demo test, 39 Power-Up Config. option, 48 Running auto calibrate, 37 PPI1 commands, 60 S Print Intensity option, 41 Print Mode option, 42 Save Config.
Index U Unpacking the printer, 21 V Validator Funct.
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Printronix, Inc. 14600 Myford Road P.O. Box 19559 Irvine, CA 92623-9559 Phone: (714) 368-2300 Fax: (714) 368-2600 Customer Support Center: (714) 368-2686 Printronix Nederland BV P.O. Box 163, Nieuweweg 283 NL-6600 Ad Wijchen The Netherlands Phone: (31) 24 6489489 Fax: (31) 24 6489499 Printronix Schweiz GmbH 42 Changi South Street 1 Changi South Industrial Estate Singapore 486763 Phone: (65) 6542-0110 Fax: (65) 6543-0220 Visit our web site at: www.printronix.com Copyright 2003 Printronix, Inc.