Barcode Printing Technology
There are four basic types of barcode printing technology: Dot Matrix,
Inkjet, Laser, and Thermal (Direct Termal and Thermal Transfer). Your
choice of barcoding printing technology depends upon your application and
the materials you will use to create labels.
Different types of barcode label and ribbon materials (i.e. wax, resin,
paper, polypropylene, serve different purposes. Whether you need a permanent
label designed to weather the elements or a shipping label meant to last
three days, Barcoding, Inc. has the necessary labels and ribbons to satisfy
your requirements
Barcode Printing Technology Comparison
| Technology |
Print Quality |
Scanner Readability |
Initial Installation Cost |
Long Term Maintenance |
Material Waste |
| Dot Matrix |
Fair |
Low |
Low/Moderate |
Moderate/High |
High |
| Ink Jet |
Moderate |
Low/Moderate |
High |
Moderate/High |
High |
| Laser |
Moderate |
Moderate |
Moderate/High |
Moderate/High |
High |
| Direct Thermal |
Moderate/
Excellent |
Moderate/
Excellent |
Moderate/High |
Low |
Low |
| Thermal Transfer |
Excellent |
Excellent |
Moderate/High |
Low |
Low |
For additional
information, contact Barcoding Inc.
Dot Matrix
Dot matrix print technology is a longstanding method of producing barcodes
on-site. The barcode image is produced by hundreds of dots printed
in a matrix to make the series of lines and spaces commonly referred to as
a barcode.
Advantages:
- Printers are easily accessible and a less expensive option of printing
- Various surfaces can be used to print on
- Multi-pass ribbons can reduce costs for ribbons and label materials
Limitations:
- Barcodes are low to medium density and may not match up to a users
standard
- Reusable ribbons can produce illegible barcodes resulting in lower
read rates.
- Ink saturation can result in bleeding on the paper resulting in image
distortion
- Though many types of material can be printed on, often these labels
are not durable, nor can they be water or chemical resistant.
- Printing of single labels results in a great loss of media and is inefficient
- No graphics capability
- Speed is suffered when trying to produce best ink coverage for optimal
readability
Ink Jet:
Ink Jet printing is usually used in high production settings where production
of barcodes and human readable fonts need to be reproduced at high rates
of speed.
Advantages:
- Direct ink jet printing requires only one step to finish the carton
or readable material, where other forms may require adhesion of a label
to the finished product
- A favorite on high-speed production lines due to its ability to mark "on
the fly"
Limitations:
- System installation is very costly as this method is designed for high-volume
barcode printing - not for individual or batch printing
- Requires constant supervision to prevent inkjet clogging and maintain
proper print quality
- Material use is restricted due to possible bleeding on certain materials
- Printing on dark backgrounds, such as corrugated cardboard, result
in hard to read barcodes.Scanning devices must be chosen carefully to
ensure proper readability
Laser:
A laser printer works much like a photo copier. Charging particles
of the paper that then attract ions from the ink. These two particles
are then bonded together by the heat and pressure of the drum.
Advantages:
- Print high-quality text and graphics on paper documents and can double
as a document printer when not being used to print barcodes.
- Density and resolution are relatively high, allowing the production
of scannable barcodes at any wavelength when read with an infrared scanner
Limitations:
- Not well suited for industrial environments
- Wasteful in small operations
- Label adhesives must be strong enough to withstand the heat and pressure
of the fuser
- Limited durability - cannot produce water resistant nor chemical resistant
labelsToner costs are generally huge with laser printers as they require
five times more toner than normal text
Thermal:
Thermal printing includes Direct Thermal and Thermal Transfer,
as explained below.
Direct Thermal:
Direct thermal printing is an older technology designed for use with copier
and fax machines that utilizes chemically coated paper.
It has since been transformed into a highly successful technology for barcoding. The
direct thermal printhead consists of a long, linear array of tiny resistive
heating elements (roughly 100-300/in.) that are arranged perpendicular to
the flow of the paper. Each printhead element locally heats an area
directly below it on the paper. The image is produced by rows of dots
caused by chemical reactions that are formed as the media passes beneath
the active edge of the printhead.
Advantages:
- Produces sharp print quality with great scannability
- Ideal for applications with a short-shelf life such as shipping labels
and receipts
- Simple to operate and inexpensive to maintain - no ink, toner or ribbon
to monitor or replace
- Batch or single label printing is available with minimal waste. Generally
Thermal printers are built more durably than dot matrix or laser printers
Limitations:
- Sensitive to environmental conditions such as heat and light
- Paper remains chemically coated after printing, sometimes requiring
a coating adhered to the paper to protect from UV light exposure, chemicals
and abrasions
Thermal Transfer:
Thermal Transfer printers use the same basic technology as direct thermal
printers, but replace chemically coated paper with a non-sensitized face
stock and a special, inked ribbon. A durable, polyester ribbon film
coated with dry thermal transfer ink is placed between the thermal printhead
and label. The thermal printhead transfers the ink onto the label surface,
where it cools and anchors to the media surface. The polyester ribbon
is then peeled away, leaving behind a stable, passive image.
Advantages:
- Crisp, high-definition text, graphics, and barcodes for maximum readability
and scannability
- Produces long life standability
- Produce batch or single print labels with minimum waste
- Long-term maintenance is low compared to dot-matrix, inkjet, and laser
- Print on a high variety of media stock
- High durability
Limitations:
- Supply costs slightly higher than Direct Thermal as Thermal transfer
requires ribbon replacement, though their printhead lasts longer
- Ribbon can be wasteful if little is printed from it
- Poor candidate for recycling
- Ribbon and Media MUST be compatible
For additional information,
contact Barcoding Inc.
|
 |
For Further Information
Contact us for a complimentary evaluation of your needs.
Call Now: 888.412.7226
Our sales team will
answer all your questions
about inventory control and
automatic data collection.
|