잉크젯 및 레이저 바코드 인쇄: 알아야 할 모든 것
Printing barcodes on desktop inkjet and laser printers — DPI requirements, toner vs ink considerations, and when to use professional alternatives.
Inkjet & Laser Barcode Printing: What You Need to Know
Desktop inkjet and laser printers can produce barcode labels for small-volume applications, prototyping, and internal use. However, they require careful attention to resolution, substrate, and quality verification to ensure reliable scanning.
Inkjet Barcode Printing
How it works: Tiny droplets of ink are sprayed onto the paper through microscopic nozzles, forming the barcode pattern dot by dot.
Minimum requirements: - 300 DPI minimum (600 DPI recommended) - Pigment-based ink (not dye-based) for better durability - High-quality matte paper or label stock - Barcode generation software (not image insertion)
Pros: Low cost, color capability, widely available Cons: Susceptible to water damage, ink smearing, lower contrast than thermal
Laser Barcode Printing
How it works: A laser writes the barcode image onto a photosensitive drum, which picks up toner. The toner is transferred to paper and fused by heat.
Minimum requirements: - 600 DPI minimum for reliable barcodes - Standard toner (black) provides good contrast - Smooth paper or label stock (textured surfaces degrade quality) - Avoid scaling barcodes after generation
Pros: Durable toner-fused output, consistent quality, fast output, water-resistant Cons: Limited to sheet-fed stock, not designed for high-volume label production
DPI and Barcode Quality
The relationship between DPI and barcode quality:
| DPI | Smallest Reliable X Dimension | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| 300 | 0.33mm (13 mil) | EAN-13 at 100%, Code 128 standard |
| 600 | 0.19mm (7.5 mil) | Reduced-size barcodes, most symbologies |
| 1200 | 0.10mm (4 mil) | Very small barcodes, Data Matrix |
Common Mistakes
- Inserting barcode images: Generating a barcode as a bitmap image and pasting it into a document causes scaling artifacts. Always use vector barcode output or barcode fonts.
- Scaling in word processors: Resizing a barcode image distorts the bar widths. Generate at the exact target size.
- Wrong paper: Glossy photo paper causes glare; textured paper causes bar edge irregularity.
- Low toner/ink: Faded bars reduce contrast below the scanning threshold.
- Duplex printing: Heat from double-sided laser printing can affect previously printed barcodes.
When to Upgrade to Thermal
Consider switching to thermal printing when:
- Volume exceeds 50 labels per day regularly
- Labels must survive shipping, handling, or outdoor exposure
- You need to print on roll stock or synthetic materials
- Barcode quality grades are consistently below B
- You are experiencing scan failures in the field
Software Options
For desktop barcode printing:
- Barcode fonts: Install in any application (Word, Excel), type data to generate barcodes
- Label software: Avery Design & Print (free), BarTender, NiceLabel
- Barcode generators: Online tools that produce print-ready PDF files
- Spreadsheet add-ins: Generate barcodes directly in Excel for batch printing