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Videojet unveils inkjet printer for coding applications

Videojet Technologies, a manufacturer of coding, printing and laser marking products, has launched Videojet 8510, a compact inkjet printer designed to meet industrial coding application requirements for the packaging industry. The Videojet 8510 is also marketed under the name Wolke m600 touch in Europe.

The Videojet 8510 is suited to a wide range of primary and secondary coding and marking applications that ensure product integrity. Its touchscreen interface allows operators to access all common operations in five or fewer touches, reducing the learning curve and increasing operator productivity.

This thermal inkjet printer incorporates the advantages of high resolution HP printing technology with an 8.4-inch menu-driven touchscreen interface, ensuring fast, error-free set up. With step-by-step prompting, each job can be input quickly and accurately, enabling packaging operations to better manage short run work with faster turnaround times.

Xavier Chaveton, European marketing director at Videojet Technologies, said: ‘Operators can quickly and easily ascertain the status of the printer, verify the print job that is currently loaded, and check cartridge ink levels and other production line data. This printer has been designed with ease of use and reliability in mind. As the job mix migrates toward shorter runs and faster turn times, users must be able to process more jobs in less time to handle increased job throughput. We believe the Videojet 8510 meets those needs superbly.’

The 600 x 600 dpi Videojet 8510 inkjet printer features spill-free print cartridges that are easy to change in less than a minute and 100 percent contained. ‘Maintenance is as easy as wiping the print head when it becomes dirty and replacing the empty ink cartridge when it runs out,’ added Chaveton.

The 8510 incorporates key elements of Videojet’s ClariSuite code assurance software. This includes the ClariSoft message template creator that moves the critical task of message template creation away from the production floor. Packaging supervisors can embed rules-based guidelines into specific message fields, thus helping operators choose the correct data when setting up a packaging run and editing the code to be printed. A built-in web server allows menu navigation from the human machine interface on OEM packaging machinery while a range of communication interfaces allows remote control operation. Its high resolution print is suited to applications that require optical character recognition (OCR) or optical character verification (OCV) for quality control purposes.

 

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