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Paper vs Printer Anonymous
Is there a recommended printer style for printing craft on? Right now I have an HP F4140 AIO. With printer paper it's fine but I'm concerned with cardstock. the paper tray is in the front, feeds through the drum doing a 180 and returns to the front. Will that kind of feed cause a bend in the stock or cause any other problems?
>> Anonymous
Try it. Your printer won't explode. It either:
A) tries to grab the paper, but can't: nothing happens.
B) grabs the paper, but it gets stuck: you need to remove the stuck paper.
C) most likely won't have any problems at all.
/po/ is papercraft and origami, not your personal helpdesk. Ask this stuff in the store where you buy your printer or where you buy your paper, or better yet: just try it. Paper won't make stuff explode (unless you set it on fire and use it to ignite a gasleak).
>> Anonymous
O.P. isn't asking if it will or won't print cardstock. We all know that card is thicker and stiffer than paper. Will going through a printer like that damage the card? I don't know. My printer is rear feed/front eject and isn't more than 70 degrees so it's not as harsh of a feed route. I don't the think OP's will kink/wrinkle the card and render the project undo-able.
>> Anonymous
I have the same exact printer as op. be prepared for loud clicking as the edge of the paper hits the teeth. Ive had no problems though
>> tohru-kun !hPvy9MQFoc
>>157377
no. it's still paper. it bends.
>> Anh1l1at1on
i highly doubt that anywhere in your printer its making a hard 180* turn looking similar to >
at most, it is probably bending at this angle
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