APPLE PRINTER DRIVER APPLICATION NOTES    

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Apple printer drivers will support all recent FGL printers. (NOTE:  Old FGL printers may not support the use of printer drivers.  FGL driver support was first introduced in 2000 on FGL22/42 printers.)  The driver will allow you to communicate through driver dependent applications (Word, Excel, Safari) and/or access the printer over a network.  Please note that the only printer status information readily available with these drivers is whether or not the printer is ready to receive data.  These drivers will not return status on any interface.  NOTE: As of December 9, Leopard contains a bug in its printer routines which cause applications to crash when using the original (RC1) BOCA printer driver.  The new (RC3) driver appears to compensate for the bug in the Leopard operating system.

 

 

Driver Download

Download the driver file below.  Double click on boca.pkg.zip to unzip the file.  Boca.pkg will appear on your desktop.  Be careful to select the proper print resolution (200, 300 or 600 dpi).

 

BOCA FGL Printer Drivers for the Mac

boca_driver (leopard compatible)

 

 

Printer/Driver Installation (USB)

All instructions are based upon the use of the Intel-based Mac OS X 10.4.9.  Other versions of the Mac OS X operating system will operate in a similar, but not identical manner.

 

Printer/Driver Installation (Ethernet)

All instructions are based upon the use of the Intel-based Mac OS X 10.4.9.  Other versions of the Mac OS X operating system will operate in a similar, but not identical manner.

 

 

If the BOCA printer model is not available under “print using”, you can either restart your computer or reset the printing system as described below.  Please note that resetting the printing system will delete all of your previously installed printers from the Printer List.

 

 

General

A printer driver translates the graphical information displayed in your Mac application into a printer friendly format.  In order to properly format the data, the user must correctly establish the page size and margins.  In general, you should use the smallest margins which do not cause the data to wrap around to the opposite side of the ticket.  Apple supports the following methods of defining page sizes:

 

All of the data sent to the Mac is provided in graphical format.  This differs from our Windows print drivers which utilize the printer’s resident fonts to send certain fonts as text, not graphics.  Our Windows drivers define tickets as width x length with the landscape mode of a 2 x 5.5 ticket printing as shown below.  Our Apple drivers define tickets as length x width with the portrait mode of a 5.5 x 2 ticket as shown below.

 

 

 

 

Windows: 2 x 5.5 landscape mode

 

 

Apple:  5.5 x 2 portrait mode

 

 

Printer Models (adjustable vs. fixed and reverse adjustable)

Due to a variety of legacy issues and driver limitations, an adjustable FGL printer operating in portrait mode requires an <rte> command in order to properly format the ticket.  This command only needs to be sent once as it is permanently stored in the printer's memory.  (You can send the printer and <rtd> command to reverse an erroneously sent <rte> command.)  Please note the manner in which the printer formats the ticket in the various scenarios shown below.