Loading Paper in the Rear Tray - Pro9500 Mark II

Article ID: ART112275 | Date published: 05/11/2015 | Date last updated: 02/08/2019
 

Description

This article explains how to load paper into the rear tray of your PIXMA Pro9500 Mark II.

 

Solution

Before loading paper, see Notes on Loading Paper.


 Note
  • You can load A3+ (13" x 19"), A3, B4, A4, B5, A5, Letter, Legal, 11" x 17" / 279.4 x 431.8 mm (Tabloid), Wide (4" x 7.1"), 4" x 6" / 10 x 15 cm, 4" x 8" / 101.6 x 203.2 mm, 5" x 7" / 13 x 18 cm, 8" x 10" / 20 x 25 cm, and 10" x 12" / 25 x 30 cm sizes of paper in the Rear Tray.
 
  1. Prepare paper.

    Align the edges of paper. If paper is curled, flatten it.



     Note
  • Align the edges of paper neatly before loading. Loading paper without aligning the edges may cause paper jams.
     
  • If paper is curled, hold the curled corners and gently bend them in the opposite direction until the paper becomes completely flat.
     
  • When using Photo Paper Plus Semi-gloss, even if the sheet is curled, load one sheet at a time as it is. If you roll up this paper to flatten, this may cause cracks on the surface of the paper and reduce the print quality.

 

  1. Load paper.

    (1) Open the Paper Support.

    (2) Gently press the upper center of the Front Tray to open it.

    (3) Pull out the Front Tray Extension.

    (4) Make sure that the Front Feed button is not lit.

    If the Front Feed button is lit or flashing, set the Front Tray to its normal printing position.

    See Returning the Front Tray to Its Normal Printing Position.



    (5) Open the Feed Slot Cover.



    (6) Load the paper in the Rear Tray WITH THE PRINT SIDE FACING YOU.

    Align the paper stack with the right edge of the Rear Tray.

     Important
     
    • Always load paper in the portrait orientation (A). Loading paper in the landscape orientation (B) can cause paper jams.


    (7) Slide the Paper Guide to align it with the left side of the paper stack.

    Do not slide the Paper Guide too hard. The paper may not be fed properly.


     Note
    • Do not load sheets of paper higher than the Load Limit Mark (C).


     

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