[. . . ] HP Designjet Z6100 Printer series Using your printer Legal notices © Copyright 2006, Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L. P. The information contained in this document is subject to change without notice. The only warranties for HP products and services are set forth in the express warranty statements accompanying such products and services. Nothing contained in other sections different from the express warranty should be construed as constituting an additional warranty. [. . . ] In the Mac OS Print dialog box, go to the Color options panel and select Color. Select Print In Grayscale and then select one of the two grayscale options that are available. Print in grayscale 93 Print options Print content Print quality Paper types These are the two grayscale options: Gray and Black Inks Only: With this option, only gray and black inks are used to produce the grayscale image. Full Set of Inks: With this option, a mix of colors are used to produce the grayscale image. Try using that option if you are experiencing bronzing when printing on glossy paper. See The image has a metallic hue (bronzing) on page 154. Print options 94 Print a draft You can configure the printer for fast, draft-quality printing. Use the Embedded Web Server Through the Embedded Web Server, go to the Submit Job page in the Main tab. In the Job Settings tree, select Basic settings and select Fast from the Print quality drop-down menu. NOTE: Be aware that when you submit more than one job at a time by clicking the Add files button in the Embedded Web Server, all of the jobs that you submit will adopt the settings of the final job that you submit. However, none of the jobs in the print queue are affected. Use a driver In the Windows HP-GL/2 or PostScript driver, go to the Paper/Quality tab and look at the Print Quality section. Move the print-quality slider to the extreme left ('Speed'). In the Mac OS Print dialog box, go to the Image Quality panel and move the print-quality slider to the extreme left ('Speed'). Use the front panel On the front panel, select the level > Fast. icon, and then select Printing preferences > Select quality NOTE: If you set the print quality from your computer, that overrides the print-quality setting on the front panel. Manage print jobs Submit a job 1. See Embedded Web Server setup options on page 23. Chapter 6 Print options 3. Click the Add files button to Browse your computer and select the files to print. NOTE: Submitting a print job through the Embedded Web Server does not require you to have the printer driver or the software that was used to create the file installed on your computer. 4. Set any other job options you may want from within the Job settings tree. If you leave an option set to Default, the setting that was saved in the job will be used. If the job contains no setting for that option, the setting in the printer will be used. The setting in the printer can be changed on the front panel, or, in some cases, through the Device Setup page in the Embedded Web Server. 5. Click the Print button. NOTE: Be aware that when you submit more than one job at a time by clicking the Add files button in the Embedded Web Server, all of the jobs that you submit will adopt the settings of the final job that you submit. However, none of the jobs in the print queue are affected. Save a job You can only save a job while submitting it for printing: 1. Click the Add files button, browse your computer, and select the file to print. If you want to submit more than one file, click the Add files button to add more files. In the Job settings tree, go to Basic settings and set the Store job in printer option to On. 6. 7. Set any other job options that you want from within the Job settings tree. [. . . ] Color model The ability to print the same colors in a particular print job, from print to print and from printer A system of representing colors by numbers. An example of such a system is RGB or CMYK. Color space A color model in which each color is repesented by a specific set of numbers. Many different color spaces can use the same color model: for instance, monitors generally use the RGB color model, but they have different color spaces, because a particular set of RGB numbers results in different colors on different monitors. Cutter A printer component that slides back and forth across the platen to cut the paper. [. . . ]