Edward W. Thompson wrote:
> I have just bought a new/used HP Businessjet 2280tn (jetdirect) as I
> need a networkable printer for my home network (WINXP Pro). The
> printer (haven't got it yet) does not come with the driver CD but
> looking at the HP web site for drivers I am totally confused as to
> which driver(s) I need. The choices are:
>
> 1. HP Universal Print Driver for Windows - PCL 5
>
> 2. HP Universal Print Driver for Windows - PCL6
>
> 3. PCL3 driver (full printing system, WHQL certified) for the hp
> business inkjet 2230/2280/2280tn printers
>
> 4. PCL3/PCL5/PostScript driver (full printing system, WHQL certified)
> for the hp business inkjet 2280/2280tn printers
>
> Driver 1 and 2 are dated 2006 while divers 3 and 4 are dated 2002 and
> are are likely the original drivers whereas 1 and 2 are the recent
> varieties. I will only be using the printer for 'home' use, not that
> that should make significant difference (at least that is what I
> think). Incidentally I really have no idea of the significance of
> PCL3, 5 and 6 and suspect that these 'protocols' are not really
> relevant to my needs. Which of the above drivers should I load, or
> doesn't it really matter?
>
> I am also somewhat confused about the networking part of the printer,
> that is Directjet. I want to connect (RJ45) the printer to my
> wireless router (3com Office Connect), Peer to Peer configuration (I
> think). I need to be able to print from other machines without having
> my machine (server) continuously on as at present (HP 930c). From my
> brief reading of the manual it looks to me that I do not need to 'use'
> the Directjet system but simply choose add network printer within
> WINXP Pro and load the p[rinbter drivers onto each of the clients.
Yes, that correct, you need only create a new tcp port on each machine and
they can print directly to it.
However, by default your printer will not have a tcp/ip address.
However if there is a dhcp server on the network it will pick one up, or
alternatively it will give itself one. It is not usually very clever and
will often give itself one which is not in a usual range. If you then put
your machine in the same network range you can simply use your browser to
'go' to it
http://dotted ip address and change it back to one in a range you
are using. You find out what range it's in by printing out it's
configuration, there's ususually a small button by the network connection
which will do this if pressed briefly after it has been switched on. After
you've changed it back to the range you are using you can then connect all
the machines to its tcp/ip port.
PCL6 drivers support more features than PCL5, Postscript drivers can
sometimes produce smaller files which should be quicker to print (that's my
experience anyway). I suspect a full feature driver will give you just that:
more thing to play with. Try them all, see whether theres a difference. I
would recommend only using the same driver on all machines however, I think
sometimes a network printer can get confused if you print from different
drivers on different machines.