The majority of the ink used with thermal printers is carbon pigmented ink which does not work well with color.
Direct thermal printer ink.
Many thermal printers work without ink toner and ribbons using small heating elements to transfer the print onto paper while others use a wax ribbon to create prints.
First the print head heats the surface of a specially formulated label material.
As the heat is applied the label face stock undergoes a chemical reaction causing the material to blacken.
For thermal printers to use colors they utilize more wax based cartridges.
With input of up to 100 discs these disc printers help take the guesswork out of production.
A direct thermal printer requires specialty paper that activates when heated and thermal transfer printers use a thermal print head to transfer ink from a wax or resin ribbon onto paper.
The mark 6 is a compact hand held thermal ink jet printer.
If the label is overexposed to heat light or other catalysts the material will darken and make the text or barcode unreadable.
Dependable inkjet technology is capable of delivering up to 100 discs per run.
For these reasons direct thermal printing is not used for lifetime identification applications.
The final disadvantage of thermal printers is also related to heat.
These machines are built to last and can deliver some of the.
Precise image creation is made possible by six separate ink cartridges.
Direct thermal printers have no ink toner or ribbon.