Thanks letting me knowI know you had asked me in a PM, I just found the label from our paper rolls.... it is marked as 220gsm
Which profile do you use or what settings?We print 80gsm bond paper for an artist who does paste ups.
Prints quite well on our 360s.
I know that many papers over 150gr are able to print on latex. I ask for 80-90 because its for very cheap and one day usage. Few hours. Cheap CAD paper that's used for plotters is the cheaper media i found yet for this jobWe usually use Lexjet 200g poster paper, anything under that gets too translucent.
As far as print-ability we just ran a very light HP Printable wrapping paper on a 12 pass 150 F profile (100% density) and it was working fine.
Be sure to advance and attach the media to a take up reel if you're getting headstrikes near the beginning.
Also check the HP Media locator before you buy any new media for your latex printer!! (you might even be able to download a ready made profile too)
https://www.printos.com/ml/#/medialocator
Which profile do you use or what settings?
It's a 360 so created it's own profile.
I think I turned the heat down a bit.
We usually use Lexjet 200g poster paper, anything under that gets too translucent.
As far as print-ability we just ran a very light HP Printable wrapping paper on a 12 pass 150 F profile (100% density) and it was working fine.
Be sure to advance and attach the media to a take up reel if you're getting headstrikes near the beginning.
Also check the HP Media locator before you buy any new media for your latex printer!! (you might even be able to download a ready made profile too)
https://www.printos.com/ml/#/medialocator
I’ve printed on HP universal bond on our 560 and it’s a pain in the ***. The paper is so thin that the vacuum pulls the paper into the ridges on the platten and you end up with noticeable lines of graininess on the finished print from where the paper was further away from the print head.
If it’s for ultra short term use then it probably doesn’t matter though.
I downloaded the profile off HPs library (on the printer panel or online) and if I remember right i turned down the vacuum. I also try to run on a 8-10 pass with only 70-80% saturation. Too much ink almost water logs the paper and causes it to cockle and warp. Too fast of a speed and the carriage will catch on the smallest curl and rip your paper to shreds.
Thanks letting me know
I’ve bought that wrapping paper before and was confused why it was so easy to mar the printed image. Can i ask what printer/profile settings you’re using and if you encountered the same thing? Even the printed samples I’ve gotten can be easily scuffed with a light brush of your fingernail.