The holder slides into the left hand side of the front panel when the printer isn’t operating as shown in the illustration below. Optical discs are loaded into the CD/DVD holder. It’s fairly shallow but the holder has an up-tilted rim to make it easy to extract. Storage space is provided below the front panel for the supplied CD/DVD holder that enables printing on coated optical disks. The power lead plugs into a connector on the rear left hand corner while the USB and Ethernet connectors are on the right rear corner. Behind it is the tray for heavier ‘fine art’ papers, which has two small extensions and accepts one sheet at a time, as shown in the illustration below. The nearer one is a multi-sheet tray that opens with one lift-up extension. Two feed-in trays are located towards the back of the printer. The output tray pulls out from the front of the printer. The Pro-100 and Pro-10 are identical in size and both use paper feeds that are similar to those on the Pro-1. although it’s slightly smaller than the Pro-1. Physically, the Pro-100 resembles its siblings (and also the Pro 9000 Mark II), having a boxy body styling. Separate software disks are provided for Windows and Mac computers, each containing the printer driver and online user manual. Taped to the plastic bag in which the printer is packed is a multi-lingual sheet covering installation of the print head. There’s also a single information sheet for Windows 8/Mac OS X 10.8, 10.7 and 10.6 users and another covering Apple AirPrint. One contains general-purpose ‘Getting Started’ instructions the other specific instructions for using the printer with ‘Non-PC Devices’ via Wireless LAN.Ī slightly smaller sheet (also folded) provides ‘Safety and Important Information’ instructions. Setting up instructions are provided in four languages (English, French, German and Dutch) on two large sheets of paper folded to roughly A4 size. Packed with the printer is a user-installable print head plus eight ink tanks, an 8 cm disc adapter and optical disk printing tray. The cradle is in four pieces, so you can remove the top sections to extract the printer from the box. The Pro-100 comes wrapped in thin plastic foam and is packaged in a large plastic bag that sits in a Styrofoam cradle. The table below compares the key features of the three printers.Īpprox. However, the new printers add some features not available in the Pro-1 including a wireless printing option, a new Pro Mode, and the Print Studio Pro plug-in to help with layouts and print options in Photoshop and Lightroom. The Pro-10 and Pro-100 use fewer inks than the Pro-1 and the tanks are smaller and ride on the print head, which means they have lower capacities. This makes the Pro-100 the first Canon dye-based printer with three monochrome inks. It has also added grey and light grey tanks to the single black tank used by the Pro 9000 Mk II, to provide better shadow reproduction and improve the quality of monochrome prints from this printer. Although it uses the same ChromaLife 100+ inks, Canon has dropped the red and green inks, replacing them with a re-formulated magenta that Canon says delivers better reds. The Pro-100 is a successor to the PIXMA Pro 9000 Mark II but with a re-jigged ink set and support for ICC profiles (see below).
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