Specifications
INTERFACES Submenus
133
Serial Port
• Baud Rate. Sets the baud rate of the serial interface in the printer. Baud 
rate is the speed at which serial data is transferred between the host 
computer and the printer. The options for the RS-232 interface are 600, 
1200, 2400, 4800, 9600, 19200, 38400, 57600, and 115200 Baud.
The factory default is 9600.
• Word Length. Sets the length of the serial data word. The length of the 
data word can be set to 7 or 8 bits and must match the corresponding 
data bits setting in the host computer.
The factory default is 8.
• Stop Bits. Sets the number of stop bits in the serial data word. Either 1 or 
2 stop bits can be selected. The setting must match the corresponding 
stop bit setting in the host computer.
The factory default is 1.
• Parity. The options are Odd, Even, Mark, Sense, or None (factory 
default). The setting must match the corresponding parity setting in the 
host computer.
• Data Protocol. You can select one of the following serial interface 
protocols to meet the host interface requirements.
• XON / XOFF (factory default). The printer controls the flow of 
communication from the host by turning the transmission on and off. 
In some situations, such as when the buffer is full or the timing of 
signals is too slow or too fast, the printer will tell the host to stop 
transmission by sending an XOFF character. An XOFF character is 
sent when the number of empty bytes in the buffer is less than or 
equal to 25 percent of the buffer size. If the host keeps sending data 
after an XOFF is sent, the printer firmware will continue to send an 
XOFF for every 16 characters received. When cleared, the printer will 
resume receiving data (XON). The data does not have any End of 
Text codes; XON / XOFF is a non-block protocol.
• ETX / ACK. End of Text / Acknowledge. The host controls the flow of 
communication to the printer by sending a block of data and ending 
the block with an End of Text (ETX) character. When the printer 
receives the ETX character, it will acknowledge the ETX, thereby 
acknowledging it has received the entire block of data.
• ACK / NAK. ACK means acknowledge; the device acknowledges it 
has accepted a transmission. NAK means negative acknowledge; the 
device did not receive the transmission.
• Series1 1 Char. The printer controls the flow of communication from 
the host by turning the transmission on and off using response 
characters sent to the host. If the number of valid bytes in the buffer 
reaches 75 percent of the buffer size, the online or offline and buffer 
full response character is sent. If the buffer is completely full, an 
online or offline buffer full response is sent every time a character is 
sent from the host. Whenever the printer state changes to online or 
offline, the appropriate response character is sent. If the idle 
response option is enabled, the printer will send a response character 










