Have you tried printing a simple text file (like etc/hosts which I always use as a quick test), as opposed to the PCL file which is full of escape sequences?
Have a star, bisawest.
With all the Googling I've been doing, I can't believe I didn't find that site myself, so thanks v. much.
(Pity it's only HP & Lexmark.......... )
Having said that.... is there anyway in which the quantity has been set on the printer itself, to override your request for copies?
You can do that on eg Xerox DocuSP based printers.
I don't think you can calculate it... so much depends on how the driver constructs the page.
But what you could do, is do a Print-to-File and see how big that file is. That shold be the same as what gets to the printer.
First Law of Questions is to include some detail. Make, Model, Printer Driver, OS, network/local, application, always/intermittent etc all help readers to think about your problem. People are more likely to spend some time on your query if there's enough detail....
Well the mode command shown above would redirect LPTx to the COMx port, so I'm wondering if it would accept USB as a port.... try
MODE LPT1:=USB:
But I dunno if the USB is addressed as "USB:" like other ports are?
Worth a try I guess?
Well PCL1 probably wasn't called PCL1 at the time, since 1st editions of anything don't usually get a number. It would have become known as PCL1 retrospectively once PCL2 came out. So maybe PCL1 could be what they mean by "just" PCL? But it's something like 20 years old.
Help I'm still looking!!
The Katun site didn't help, but thanks anyway.
We're analysing a lot of printer fleets with some software which captures the characteristics of each print job, and tots up the figures per printer and user over say 30 days.
BUT for each printer, I need to enter the...
This strikes me as some kind of translation table thing, but can't for the life of me think where!
Here's just a few quick thoughts, to help with diagnosis:
Make a plain text file in say Notepad, and in a Dos window, COPY it to the printer at LPT1: assuming it's local. That might help isolate...
Do you mean it's printing the whole page, but 1/4 size at top left, or only printing 1/4 of the content?
If it's the former, it might be that the resolution is out by a factor of 2 in the driver or on the printer's panel of it has one.
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