Canon iPf5000 driver bugs, OS X
2006-10-27 by CDTobie@aol.com
The Canon iPF5000 printer has an interesting bug in the driver. If you define a set of settings at the driver level, then load a sheet of paper, choose the correct media setting and size (you must do this at both ends, driver and printer, and woe be to the one who does not get them all exactly right!), you must them go from the default "copies and pages" screen, to the "main" screen before hitting print, or else your (correctly selected) media type will not be used, the printer will show a "wrong paper type" warning while printing, and colors in your print will not be correct. You don't have to actually reselect your paper type to have it print correctly, you simply need to open the screen where it shows before pushing the print button. Given all the other distractions when printing on sheets of fine art paper with the iPF5000 (long waits before loading sheets, after prints complete, frequent rejection of a loaded sheet, settings required at both ends each time, etc. If you choose to print ten copies, you must load each sheet one at a time, and choose paper type and media size for every single one of them. Out of ten prints, you should plan on at least five or six sheet loading failures as well) many users may have missed this bug. Since I am printing black and white images, which are very sensitive to media setting, it shows up quite clearly: fail to open the "main" window, get an incorrect print, even though you have the right media setting defined twice: once at the printer, once in the driver preset. Haven't tested to see if this situation occurs under Windows. The Direct Export Module for the iPF5000 may not suffer from the bug noted above, but it has a bug of its own: you can only get proper density in prints if you use a custom ICC profile. If you choose the default color or black and white settings, the prints are significantly light (about as much as a gamma 2.2 > gamma 1.8 mismatch, interestingly enough). Also worth note with the export module: you can print grayscale output, but only from RGB files; grayscale files are not accepted. Since I'm printing to PrintFIX PRO 2.0 ICC profiles designed for grayscale or tinted grayscale printing from either grayscale or RGB files, this works fine for me, but it would seem to eliminate most other grayscale printing, if accuracy is at all a factor. This printer offers excellent black and white prints, once you get that far... C. David Tobie Product Technology Manager ColorVision Business Unit Datacolor Inc. CDTobie@... www.colorvision.com [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]