Drivers Generic Multifunction Devices



  1. Multifunction Device Stig
  2. Xerox Multifunction Device

Bluetooth driver after a fresh install can sometimes be the most difficult driver to install as sometimes internal adapter give little information on the Bluetooth adapter that isn’t working correctly. External USB Bluetooth adapters are not as bad as you can usually get some information on the device directly from the adapter. For these products, MCCI® provides a general purpose USB Generic Driver, which can be used with any device class (including vendor-specific classes) without developing new drivers. Any Win32 application can use the standard Windows CreateFile, ReadFile, WriteFile, and DeviceIoControl APIs to access the device using the generic driver. Instead of installing and managing individual drivers for each printer model, administrators can install the Lexmark Universal Print Driver for use with a variety of both mono and color laser printers and multi-function devices.

Choosing the correct Canon Print Driver

Drivers Generic Multifunction Devices

What are Page Description Languages?

To understand why different machines need different drivers, first we need to understand what a page description language (PDL) is. A PDL is a programming code that instructs a digital print engine where and how to place text and graphics onto a page.

When you send a print job to a machine, the driver converts your print job into a language the printer can understand. In order for this to work, your print device and driver must both use the same PDL. The key here is to use a driver that supports the PDL’s available to your print device.

Each printer manufacturer has its own preferred PDL. Canon’s proprietary languages are Ultra Fast Renderer 2 (UFR II) and GARO, other common PDL’s are PCL (HP) and Postscript (Adobe). Most Canon Multifunctional Printers understand UFR II and PCL straight out of the box. You will normally require a license for Postscript printing.

Downloading the Canon Printer Driver

Multifunction Device Stig

Drivers generic multifunction devices driver

There are many drivers available to download on the Canon Download Centre. This guide will attempt to make it easier to choose the correct Canon print driver for your device.

This guide will concentrate on drivers for iR and iR Advanced multifunctional devices.

Go to Canon Download Centre and search for you model number.

We will use the iR Advance c5250i as an example.

Drivers generic multifunction devices scanner

Once you select your model you will be presented with a list of available drivers/software. Often the Canon site will promote a Recommended Driver which is normally the latest PCL driver. If there is no recommended driver you are left to pick from a long list, so we will need to narrow it down.

Selecting the Right Driver

Drivers

At the time of writing there were 48 different downloads available. That’s a lot to choose from, so we need to determine which driver best suits your printing needs. The below list details our preferred driver’s for the Canon iR Advance range of machines.

    • UFRII stands for Ultra Fast Renderer 2. As the name suggests it is able to process jobs much faster than PCL or postscript drivers. It does this by compressing the print data before it reaches the device. Load Balancing technology allows the data to be processed by both the computer and the device resulting in a much faster processing time.
    • During installation the driver will query the device for its capabilities so you do not have to manually specify its configuration.
    • This driver does not support Barcode printing.
    • Compatible with Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 10 Server 2003, Server 2008 and Server 2012. There is also a MAC OSX version of this driver which can be downloaded here.
    • This is our preferred driver for Small/Medium Business installations due to its superior processing speed and wide ranging compatibility.
    • PCL is HP’s proprietary Page Description Language. It stands for Printer Command Language.
    • Widely used in many enterprise applications such as AS400, Unix, and Oracle.
    • Supports barcode printing (Optional JetCAPS BarDIMM required).
    • Only to be used if your device supports PCL. Most new devices in the iR Adv range support PCL out of the box. Older iR series machines may not contain PCL print capabilities. This depends on the device model and configuration.
    • Compatible with Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 10 Server 2003, Server 2008 and Server 2012.
    • This driver is best suited to businesses that have a preference for PCL or if barcode printing is required.
    • Postscript is a printing language by Adobe that is more suited to professional printing environments where print quality takes priority over speed.
    • Only to be used if your device supports Postscript. Most mid range Canon devices do not support postscript without the optional Postscript kit being installed.
    • Compatible with Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 10 Server 2003, Server 2008 and Server 2012.
    • This is a generic driver that works across a range of devices. If you have many Canon devices and would like to use a single UFR driver rather than a specific driver for each device then this may be a suitable solution.
    • The driver has to be configured manually after installation. You will need to add the devices capabilities to the Device Settings tab (Can it print in Colour, How many cassettes, What paper sizes, Is there a finisher attached etc).
    • This driver does not support Barcode printing.
    • This is a generic driver that works across a range of devices. If you have many Canon devices and would like to use one PCL driver rather than a specific driver for each device then this may be a suitable solution.
    • The driver has to be configured manually after installation. You will need to add the devices capabilities to the Device Settings tab (Can it print in Colour, How many cassettes, What paper sizes, Is there a finisher attached etc).
    • This driver does not support Barcode printing.
    • This driver has been designed, developed and optimised primarily to work in Citrix and other thin client network environments.
    • Supports most Canon device options and functions.
    • Retains an extremely small footprint.
    • Includes both 32bit and 64bit drivers.
    • Compatible with Citrix Presentation Server 3.0, 4.0, 4.5, ICA Citrix Client 8.0, 9.0, 10.10, 11.0, 12.0
    • Allows you to send faxes from your PC to your fax equipped Multifunctional device.
    • Includes both 32bit and 64bit drivers.
    • Compatible with Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, Server 2003, Server 2008 and Server 2012.

Search the Knowledge Base:

How can I remove the Generic Windows driver?
(KB # ED3A0593)

Multifunction

Xerox Multifunction Device

Symptom:

How can I remove the Generic Windows driver?

The following steps detail how to remove the generic Tandberg Data Windows driver. Datafab usb devices driver download for windows 8.1. This is the only way to completely remove the driver. Please follow the steps exactly.

  1. Boot the system with the VXA drive attached and powered-on.
  2. Click on Start / Settings / Control Panel, then double click the System icon.
  3. Click on the Hardware tab then click on the Device Manager button.
  4. In the list of devices, find the Tape drives category.
  5. Expand Tape drives, and look for a device with the name of 'Ecrix VXA-1', 'Exabyte VXA-2', 'Exabyte VXA-3' or 'Mammoth2'.
  6. Right click the tape device and select Uninstall. At the Confirm Device Removal dialog, click OK.
  7. Right click on Start, and choose Explore.
  8. Go to the WINNTINF directory.
  9. Look for files called OEM*.INF. Open each OEM*.INF file and look for VXA.INF for VXA drives or ExbtM2.INF, for Mammoth 2 drives at the top of the file. When you have found an OEM*.INF file with VXA.INF or ExbtM2.INF, take note of the name of the file. For example, OEM6.INF.
  10. Close the file. Delete the OEM*.INF file for VXA or M2 and delete its corresponding OEM.PNF file as well. For example, if the file called OEM6.INF is for VXA, delete both the OEM6.INF and OEM6.PNF files.
  11. In Explorer, go to the WINNTSYSTEM32DRIVERS directory for Windows 2000 or WINDOWSSYSTEM32DRIVERS directory for Windows 2003. Find the corresponding .sys file and delete it. i.e. vxa.sys, vxa32.sys
  12. Reboot the system.