Thanks too for that suggestion. However, you might notice in my post that I have been using qimage for some years with the technique I outlined and the problem is not overcoming printer length limitation. (BTDT) It is controlling the vertical positioning on the print roll output when using these techniques that is my issue.
I do recognise that with the 4900 I can manually set roll cut length for each pano printed (and then directly control all margins) - but I am trying to find a method which will work well for panor's of arbitrary length. (which the method I outlined does - by and large for full roll-width panos)
I am appreciative of your reflections and any further insights will be much appreciated.
I think I am getting very muddled with too many mixed numbers and page settings.
What I was trying to tell you was that I got the feeling that you were printing poster panels as a pano and wanted to paste the panels to make a long pano.
This is OK if you didn't have a wonderful printer like a 4900 that has roll paper and banner mode.
This allows you to print one sheet with the pano printed.
You mention setting the "long side" in Qimage
In Qimage I use the print settings "set long edge" to be just longer than the actual print size and Qimage sends the requisite number of pages. You can see why the printer has to think it is borderless as it assembles the print as a banner. In the past this was a workaround for long prints
That setting in Qimage sets print size not paper size.
So that's incorrect.
Then you start talking about
"maximum quality" which sets the driver to 2880x1440dpi.
That confuses INPUT ppi with output DPI.
Let's get on the same page so we can help.
I have tried to explain the correct way to make a pano on a 4900.
My friend Peter has the 4900 and prints my panos on it.
You select roll paper banner mode. You describe the size page you want.
You only know the 17.01" at the beginning, you MUST set the long side of the print paper to larger than the print.
Then Qimage can calculate and make set up a print using the allowable print area of the 17.01 inches and the all the length it needs.
Then you can either reset the User defined page length or use the Auto cut feature in Qimage which will stop the print and paper feed just after the end of the print.
You say you are a long time user of Qimage, but you don't seem to understand its capabilities. It is better than Genuine Fractals, proved over and over.
IF Qimage detects this - terrific - but from a look at the print preview at full magnification I suspect this may not be the case. (of course the print preview may not reveal dot level data). In any case the above dpi as displayed by the printer I believe are likely to be interpolated ink delivery resolutions for reasons I noted in the previous post. The best information I have is that the "input - native" resolution of the printer is 720dpi
You cannot see PPI in the screen unless there's a lot lower ppi than the screen resolution of the monitor, so don't bother looking at the monitor for a difference.
Whatever the PPI of the print, *** Depends on the size print, how many images you stitched together in your stitching program which determines the resolution of the image you are going to print, Qimage will look at the native 720 ppi setting of the driver, and take whatever ppi is currently created by you with the image and the print size, and send 720 ppi to the printer driver.
It will down sample if you gave it too much, and it will upsample if you gave it less.
That's it's strength!!!!
Let Qimage do the job and you will get the very best prints.
If you let Qimage do its job, it will send the 720 ppi print file to the driver which will do nothing but use it to print. That's the point!!!
We want the printer driver to be dumb. Do nothing but print. Leave the interpolation to Qimage.
Previously, were you printing 20 prints and pasting them together?
This method will produce a perfect Pano all one sheet, with margins that are even (see snap) (even to the extent that it shows a centered print with excess paper becoming the margins.)
Best I can do in general.
Please follow up with specific questions on specific areas.
If you have a question on PPI vs DPI, keep it as a single question.
If you have a question on page length, keep it single.
Otherwise, I have trouble following your thoughts.
Fred