Milky looking film is probably paper residue, which is normal.
To check print density hold against a bright light while on paper. The
only definite test however is etching and checking if the larger areas
are pitted or not.
Old HP printers used to have mechanical knobs inside the printer,
often green, to adjust toner density, rather than a driver setting. I
don't know this model.
ST
On Sat, Nov 28, 2009 at 10:31 AM, Howard <howard_g7lqy@...> wrote:
> Hi
> Anyone using this printer for toner transfer ?
> what sort of results do\did you get ?
>
> I have been having a play about with it, and i can get it to print
> dark on some paper(has a matt finish), but i think that there is not
> enough toner going onto the paper(it leaves a milky looking film on
> the pcb after soaking in warm soapy water).
>
> Is there a printer driver for this printer that can put more toner on
> the paper ?
>
> Thanks
> Howard
>
>
>
>
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