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5. Which Of The Following Is The Correct Final Step To Take Before Plotting Printing

How do I reset ink level on HP Deskjet 2135 Printer after refilling 680 cartridge?

Hello,There are three ways to reset the ink level on HP deskjet.Remove both the black and the color ink HP cartridges from your printer.Press the 'On' button on your printer to turn it on, wait 20 seconds, then turn it off. Allow the printer to completely turn off. Repeat this step five times so that the HP cartridge identification information will be erased from the printer's memory. HP printers normally store the identification information of the last five ink cartridges that were used. This will make the printer 'remember' the last 5 cartridges as 'none'.Insert back the cartridges inside the printer. Print a test page to ensure the cartridge level system is reset.Method 2: A full reset of the printer should also do:Remove the cartridges and unplug the printer.Hold the power button on for 30+ seconds. Then release.Plug in printer and reinstall cartridges one at a time.Method 3:Remove the cartridge and on the 2nd contact column from the left, place adhesive tape over the top contact in that column.Place the cartridge back into the printer. A message may show up that there is an issue with your cartridge. Ignore it. Print an alignment page.Take the same cartridge out of the printer when the alignment page is done.Do not touch or remove the tape that was originally put on the cartridge. Now grab adhesive tape and put it over the 2nd column from the right, on the top contact.Place the cartridge into the printer again. Let it be detected.Take the cartridge out of the printer one more time, and remove all adhesive tape.Put the cartridge back again into the printer. Print again an alignment page and the ink level should show full.Talk to experts to know more about Printers and resolve any issue instantly. Visit Data Backup and Identity Protection USA now.

Why does my printer keep printing blank page?

There are few things more frustrating than carefully putting together an important document or file and pressing ‘Print’, only for the printer to send out a completely blank sheet of paper, as fresh-faced as the day it left the ream. There are a few things which could be the cause of this problem so we will run through the most common, and detail how to rectify these problems in a timely fashion.Empty CartridgesWe don’t want to sound condescending, but have you checked the ink/toner levels in your cartridge? They may have completely depleted since you last used the printer. Check the ink/toner levels and replace when necessary.Disconnected CartridgeEven if your cartridge is full and ready for action, it may have become slightly dislodged and no longer in full electrical contact with the printer. The easiest way to rectify this potential problem is to simply remove and reinstall the cartridges. This may complete the electrical circuit and ensure everything runs and prints as normal.Incorrect Paper SizeIf you have accidentally (or purposefully for a previous print job) changed the in-program paper size setting without reverting back to your paper size of choice – it could be confusing the printer. Go into Print Preview or the print settings and make sure the correct paper size is selected.Clogged NozzlesThis problem is particularly likely to affect people who use their printer quite infrequently, with hardened ink potentially clogging up the nozzles. If your printer has a ‘Print Head Nozzle Check’ option, select that and let the machine clear the nozzles. This should remove any blockages and help the ink to flow once again.Windows:- Open up Printing Preferences (this is accessible in a number of different ways, depending upon the version of Windows)- Click Maintenance- In the Settings section, select Skip Blank Page- Save your settings by clicking OKMAC:- Open Finder and select System Preferences- Depending upon the version of OS, select either Print & Scan, Print & Fax or Printers &Scanners:- Select Options & Supplies- Click either Driver or Options- Tick the Skip Blank Page and click OKAfter trying all the above solutions, If problem continue then reach out printer repair service center for resolution. There may be any technical problem with your printer.

How to print something on a small piece of paper?

print it on a big paper then cut it down to 5 inch's wide 2 inches high

How do I plot a drawing to fit an A3 sheet using AutoCAD?

First go into Pagesetup Manager and create a page setup (or go to plot if you insist on doing this every time you want to plot a file)OK, you'll need to cover a couple of controls in the Pagesetup/Plot dialogfrom the list of plotter configurations, you need to select a printer driver that supports the A3 paper size.  Most large format printers have had the standard ISO sizes for decades, as do the PDF and DWF drivers, so that shouldn't require any additional steps.  You can create a custom paper size for most plotter drivers but cross that bridge if you get to it.Now this is where people get screwed up: You have to pick the orientation of the sheet AND the orientation of the plot on the sheet.  Your list of paper sizes includes landscape and portrait orientations of each.  The size you choose should correspond to how the paper comes out of the printer.  THEN you specify in the Plot dialog, under the preivew, the orientation of the plot on the paper.  All that this portrait/lanscape control tile does is align the horizontal axis of your drawing view to the long side of the paper.  Check the preview to be sure.After that you need to scale your graphics to fit on an a3 sheet. The "Scale to Fit" control ought to take care of that.  Once you've done that, then you need to set your plot area.  Fit all geometry is usually the goto option but, it neglects one thing: most borders include the actual paper area, which when scaled to fit, insets the paper inside the printable area.  Use the rectangular area option and box select the corners of the border.  Finally, you'll want to set the plotted area to automatically center on the printed page if you're not going to trim it (and most places don't even have a paper cutter these days)And an afterthought.  If you're doing a half-sized print (also called a condo print) of an A1 paper size, then you might want to create a plot style with adjusted lineweights to keep close parallel lines from gooping up.  If this is a one-off or you don't know what a plot style is, then don't worry about it.The way to be sure all of this works out is to do the print preview.  This has become a lot more responsive and comprehensive since the early days, so there's no reason you shouldn't get exactly what you expected out of our printer.

What are the different types of printers?

Printer (computing)

Question about Spectrophotometer?

That would be like trying to drive with a fogged up windshield. Normally, you can't see the windshield - because it doesn't interfere with the path of the light from outside before it enters your eye. But the particles (tiny water droplets) on the windshield scatter the light, resulting in a fuzzy picture for you, the driver.

In a spectrometer, the sample solution is placed inside the cuvet, and a tiny spectrum light beam is shined through it. Some light is absorbed by the sample, and the rest is transmitted and hits the (also tiny) detector on the other side of the cuvet. The "absorbance" is basically the difference between the full spectrum of the beam, i.e., before it passes through the sample, and the detected light, i.e., after it passes through the sample.

The cuvet itself isn't supposed to absorb any light, and normally it doesn't - but if it's dirty, that's a different situation. The oil/dirt particles will scatter (change the angle of travel of), and possibly absorb, some of the light. This will give a false reading.

(a) Oil & dirt in the form of fingerprints certainly won't CREATE more light for the detector to see. But it will scatter and/or absorb some of the beam's light - which means that less will reach the detector. Remember that absorbance is light that doesn't reach the detector...

(b) Beer's Law states that higher absorbance means higher concentration (A = ebC).

(c) Kc is the equilibrium constant, and is basically products over reactants. I'm not sure exactly what your equation will be since I don't know what the experiment is. You will answer this question based on how the concentrations of the products and reactants will appear to change based on the effect of fingerprints on absorbance from (a) and (b).

How to print at scale 1:50 in AutoCAD 2011?

You must first figure out how large is your drawing. You might have set the correct scale but the drawing is just too large for it. Scale of 1:50 is normally used for details like column/footings or other parts of a building. Site Plans normally would be plotted to 1:100 or smaller.

If you draw in meters, try to establish a reference scale preferably 1:100 and try to draw a rectangle representing the plot area of your papersize on the drawing. Convert units for consistency then compare the papersize to your drawing. The idea of having a 1:100 ref. scale is that 1cm(10mm) on your ruler represents a meter and from that convention, you resize your paper changing units to meter.

Ex. 24"x36" is equivalent to 60cmx90cm, so you're going to draw 60m x 90m rectangle (with respect to 1:100 scale). Then, offset the rectangle inwards with value equal to your prefered margin to get the plot area. You can then trial-resize your drawing until it fits the plot area and when you get the correct scale factor, then you can obtain the correct plot scale to be used.

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