In article <BAzhN0B19qM$(E-Mail Removed)>,
(E-Mail Removed)ks
says...
> In article <Y5uYa.251573$(E-Mail Removed)>, Dave Reed
> <(E-Mail Removed)> writes
> >How can I tell which direction is the 600 and which is the 1200?
>
> You will find that the greater number is always the horizontal scan of
> the laser. It's much easier to modulate the laser beam than to increase
> the efficiency of all the motors and the feeding mechanism to give you
> 1200 vertical dpi. For example to get true 1200x1200 dpi on Lexmark
> Optras they slow the engine down by half so that, for example, a 24ppm
> laser becomes 12ppm in 1200x1200 mode.
>
> HP doesn't do this on their printers but when they run 1200x1200 dpi
> then you lose edge smoothing as the ASIC which does edge smoothing is
> turned off.
>
> In terms of quality its almost impossible to see the difference between
> 1200x1200 and 1200x600 with edge smoothing or even 600x600 with edge
> smoothing. It's all a numbers game to persuade you that more dots must
> be better.
>
>
Interesting bit of info. The reason most printers are more detailed on
the horizontal (and same goes for video) is that the human eye is more
sensitive to left/right definition than top/bottom.
Unlike cats which are more sensitive to top/bottom.
Theory is that pre-humans and early humans needed to see horizontal
movement more.