Saturday, December 12, 2009

Technologies Bubble Jet Printer by Canon

True performance printing

Bubble Jet technology is the most famous proprietary technology of Canon. Canon is essentially the Bubble Jet technology has paved the way for the whole industry printers inkjet.
It is also worth noting that the discovery was made accidentally when a researcher noticed Canon's launch of a drop of ink from a syringe when it accidentally came into contact with a hot soldering iron.

Since the mid-1970s that took them and the movement later (mid 1980s) of BJ-10, the first bubble jet printer, mass production, Canon, through continuous research and development provides innovative printers that combine quality, speed, ergonomics, reliable operation and low total cost of ownership.

The new PIXMA photo printers use printheads technology FINE (Full-photolithography Inkjet Nozzle Engineering) of Canon. The patented production method used by semiconductor Canon for the construction of warheads FINE makes it possible to create print heads with exceptionally high nozzle numbers and density. This technology gives Canon printers can achieve top speeds and superior print quality photos and documents. The FINE print heads allow the deposition of ink on paper more in less time than conventional technology, ink jet, producing rapid borderless photo printing.

The FINE print head also obtain quality professional photo lab thanks to tiny nozzles (Micro-Nozzles) using (9 mm diameter), which produce millions of microscopic droplets of ink per second - with volume up just 1 pikoliter (depending on model) - with stunning stability and accuracy.

For prints with enhanced fade resistance, PIXMA photo printers that support the system's ChromaLife100 Canon: a system of genuine ink dye-based Canon, which provides extremely wide range of colors and photo paper specially designed for use with print heads FINE. This technology triangle - the nozzle design, ink and media - provides printing comparable to that of traditional photographic workshops at quality, and in life. The prints remain unchanged for 100 years when stored in an album, 30 years when displayed behind glass and 10 years when exposed to the air.

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