Plastic Card Printers
HDP600-CR100 High Definition Dual Sided Colour Card Printer For CR100 Cards
Introduction
The HDP600 Card Printer/Encoder produces vibrant, full-color, dual-sided cards utilizing Fargo's High Definition Printing™ (HDP™) technology. It consistently delivers exceptional print quality, high card duarability and over-the-edge printing, encoding and laminating of technology-rich contact and contactless smart cards. Weigand cards, proximity cards and optical memory cards.
With traditional dye-sublimation printers, the printhead comes in contact with the card it's printing. Unfortunately, this means these printers can't consistently print on the ridges and indentations caused by internal RFID antenna, integrated circuits and smart chips. Even worse, the card's electronics can get damaged by, or damage, the printhead. With High Definition Printing, however, there's never any contact between the printhead and card. Instead, the HDP600 prints images onto the underside of the HDP Film, which is then fused flush to the card through heat and pressure. Now you can consistently print over surface irregularities - even to the edge of a smart chip - without damaging the card's electronics or your printhead.
The HDP600 lets you print and encode high-security cards in one pass, plus add lamination for an extra layer of protection with the lamination module to your HDP600. The patented clear and holographic PolyGuard™Overlaminates provide the maximum protection from tampering, counterfeiting and everyday wear and tear. They can also save you money by reducing the need to issue replacement cards.
Features
- Dye sublimation/thermal transfer print technologies
- Single sided printing - Colour or Monochrome
- Entry-level photo ID software included
- Edge-to-edge printing on CR-80 cards
- 200 card integrated card feeder
- 54 seconds per card full-color (YMCKO)
- Automatic ribbon synchronisation
- Windows Drivers 2000, XP
Options
- Card lamination module
- Printer cleaning kit
- Magnetic stripe encoding
Product Updated: Monday, February 2, 2009



