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GLOSSARY OF TERMS
100% New Compatible - A product that is produced brand new by a
non-OEM manufacturer.
Compatible/Remanufactured - Any cartridge that has been disassembled
and then re-assembled in the production process.
Cross Compatible - A product that can be used in multiple OEM machine
models.
Fuser - An internal printer component that permanently bonds the
dry toner to the page. Fuser rollers apply heat and pressure to the toner making
it bond to the page. Cleaning and maintenance of the fuser assembly rollers is vital
in keeping quality printing performance.
MICR - (Magnetic Ink Character Recognition) refers to the type
of toner inside the cartridge. MICR cartridges contain magnetic toner that can be
read by automated MICR reading equipment. This toner is also more costly and less
common than standard black non-MICR toners. The most common use of MICR printing
is routing and account information on checks. The American National Standards Institute
(ANSI) specifications are considered by the U.S. banking industry as the definitive
criteria for judging the quality of a MICR document.
OEM - Original Equipment Manufacturer, (i.e. HP, Lexmark, Canon,
etc.)
Page Coverage - A number that refers to the percentage of a printed
page that is covered by toner. Typical page coverage is 5%.
Page Yield - A number that indicates the number of pages you can
expect from the full life cycle of your cartridge. Our page yields are established
by testing 5% page coverage per color benchmarked against the OEM.
Print Tests - Consist of a series of post testing on a newly assembled
cartridge. Testers evaluate the variable types of print demands expected on each
cartridge. This helps determine which finished assembled cartridges are ready for
packaging.
Toner - This is a highly refined dry powder that is inside the
toner hopper of a laser cartridge. Monochrome toner is usually dark black and consists
of minute amounts of resin that are fused to the page with heat and pressure. Color
printers use four color toners: black, cyan, magenta, and yellow (known as "process
colors"). They combine to make up the full variety and shades of color.
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