I don't agree that it has a direct relationship.

I really depends on how the printer deals with it.

If the printer does 600 vs 1200 DPI by "skipping" dots, then lower DPI would save toner.

ie (linear only, not showing the other axis)

600 DPI "skipped"
X X X X X X
 X X X X X X
X X X X X X
 X X X X X X
X X X X X X
 X X X X X X


Vs

600 DPI "Big"
XXXXXX
XXXXXX
XXXXXX
XXXXXX

1200 DPI may use a bit more or a bit less toner depending on the way the printer renders it, but in most cases I would not expect a significant change unless the printer was sill using 1200DPI dots, and skipping pixels.

-Harry


On 09/15/2014 11:15 AM, Thane Sherrington wrote:
At 02:58 PM 15/09/2014, DSinc wrote:
Thane,
There is a complex formula and special page image that most priter companies use to help them compute (fabricate/lie) about their printed pages/catridge. Please note that this business does NOT use 100% coverage. I just do not know many folk that print fully black pages. I have to claim age/time/forgetfulness for not recalling what the 'coverage' percentage was/is. But I do recall that there is a specification about this the all printer makers try to meet/exceed. And, alot of this has do do with various makers 'image generators.'

Hi Duncan,
Yeah, I know about the page used (I've seen a copy from Lexmark). I was just wondering if they are printing this page at 300dpi or 1200 dpi when they come up with the number of pages a toner will print.

I was sitting down with graph paper trying to figure out the dot coverage, so I appreciate your help. :)

T



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