If you are among the truly curious, you may wonder how FARGO digital ID card printers actually get those great looking images onto plastic cards. Well, this too is easier than you might expect.  FARGO ID Card Printers utilize two similar technologies called direct-to-card printing and High Definition Printing (HDP).

  • Direct-to-card printing is the traditional technology used by digital card printers to print images directly onto the surface of a plastic card. it does this by heating a special print ribbon beneath a thermal printhead, resulting in thephoto id card printer transfer of color from the ribbon to a blank card.
  • With the FARGO High Definition Printing technology, the printer first prints images onto a special HDP film which is then fused into the surface of
    a blank card through heat and pressure.  Because the graphics and text are
    printed on the underside of the HDP
    film, the image is “sandwiched”between the highly durable film and the card.  This unique process results in exceptional print quality, durability,
    and the ability to print on the widest variety of acrd types or sizes.
Fargo ribbon
card printing

During printing, a printhead containing hundreds of thermal elements heats the dyes on the ribbon which then vaporize and diffuse into the surface of either the card (for direct-to-card printing) or the HDP film.  A separate pass is made of reach of the three color panels on the ribbon. By combining the colors of each panel and by varying the heat used to transfer these colors, the printer is able to produce up to 16.7 million, photo-realistic colors.

With either of these remarkable digital printing technologies, there are two shared print methods both use to actually do the printing. These print methods are called dye-sublimation and resin thermal transfer.

Resin Thermal Transfer

Card Printer Ribbon

Resin Thermal Transfer is the process FARGO printers use to print sharp black text and crisp bar codes which can be read by both infra-red and visible-light bar code scanners.  like dye-sublimation, this process uses the same thermal printhead to transfer color from the ribbon roll to the card or the HDP film. The difference, however, is that solid dots of color are transferred in the form of a resin-based ink which is fused to the surface of the card when heated. This produces very durable, single-color images.

Resin black panels are included on many of the FARGO full-color dye-sublimation ribbons so that you can automatically print both dye-sublimation and resin images on the same card.  This gives cards the benefits of both print methods.

Resin-only ribbons are also available for use with the FARGO direct-to-card printers for printing economical one-color cards in as fast as 5 seconds.  These ribbons consist of a continuous roll of a single resin color and can produce up to 3,000 cards. Black, scratch-off and a variety of other resin ribbon colors are available.

Dye-Sublimation

Dye-Sublimation is the process FARGO printers use to print smooth, continuous-tone images that look truly photographic. This process uses a dye-based ribbon roll that is partitioned by a number of consecutive color panels. The panels are grouped in a  repeating series of the three process color -- Yellow Magenta, and Cyan (YMC) -- along the entire length of the ribbon.

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How Digital Card Printers Work