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- HP Community
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- Printers Archive
- Printing booklet with content the same size as on screen

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03-22-2017 11:08 AM
When I print to booklet, either printing pdfs from Acrobat Reader or a browser or two, or printing music notation from Finale 14.5, the printer decides that I need margins of about 0.75 inch on the left and the right. In order to preserve the aspect ratio, the printer kindly reduces my document, giving me lots of beautiful white space, but music notation that is hard to read. I can increase the size of my notation before printing, but since I'm trying to produce usable archive copies for my own use as well as proof copies before I send my music to a printer for multiple copies, I need a WYSIWYG printer, not one where I have to mutilate my document to get a readable copy (and then there are those large left and right margins that are going to force me to make documents with more pages...and more page turns! Anathema for a musician).
And I'm not going to start on the problems printing a concert program from Word--not until I decide whether it's worth keeping this otherwise wonderful printer.
My question, then: Can I get smaller left and right margins? The Brother printer I'm considering as a substitute has margins of 0.12 inch, as well as an adjustable offset for gutter. Can HP match this, or should I just return my printer? I have 30 years of music manuscripts I'm working with; reformatting them all is not a choice. If I need to switch to a more expensive printer or a laser printer, just say so.
Thanks in advance for your help.
03-22-2017 11:51 AM
Thanks for your questions about the OfficeJet Pro 7740. According to the documentation in the following link this printer is capable of Borderless printing.
http://h10032.www1.hp.com/ctg/Manual/c05216524
(pdf manual) then follow the link on page 144 for print margins
You will have to make sure you choose the paper size in the printer settings along with the page setup in the appplication you are using.
03-22-2017 12:06 PM
Hello,
Have you tried using the 'Scale' and 'Fit to page size' settings when you open File > Print or Print Preview? Locations of these settings vary depending on the program you are using, but you can try experimenting with them to see if the margins adjust to your needs.
Then in the Print window in the app you are printing from, click the Properties or Printer Preferences button to open the print settings included with the HP driver you installed for your printer. Look for a Layout tab and an Advanced button to see if your driver has any further settings for changing the margins and turning off borderless printing.
For some apps, you might need to fiddle with the Layout and margin settings there before using the printer's driver settings.
Go to HP Printers - Print Driver Settings Guide (Windows) for an overview of driver settings and where to find them.
I work on behalf of HP
03-22-2017 12:17 PM
Thanks for the quick response. Borderless printing has to be turned off for booklet printing, so that solution doesn't work, alas! When I set Borderless printing, I get an error message:
Selection conflicts were encountered. Would you like them auto-resolved?
Borderless Printing: On
Booklet Left binding
Borderless Printing: On
Pages per sheet: 2
Borderless Printing: On
Paper type: Plain Paper
I need a solution that goes beyond the manual (which nowhere states what the unprintable area size is, so the manual itself is flawed) and, apparently, the standard driver.
03-23-2017 11:10 AM
Thanks to those who offered suggestions for solving my problem. I followed up the various links and suggestions, even if I'd been there before, to no avail. I also spent a couple of hours in a chat session that didn't go as well as this forum post. It's clear to me that the 7740, as nice as it is, cannot handle anything beyond casual, occasional booklet-making.
Since I need a printer that can handle booklets in a more professional way, I'm giving up on the 7740. I may also have to give up on HP, at least inkjets, since this border issue seems to occur on more than one printer. It's been an interesting, if frustrating, week.
