A high speed multilevel color printer required custom halftoning hardware. For this multitone environment we revised traditional halftone thresholding (i.e. turning the output from no intensity to full intensity). Unfortunately, intermediate values did not print large areas reliably. Legacy image data files existed that were already halftoned. To correct these problems, binary halftone methods were modified to produce multi-bit outputs. This was accomplished by using threshold matrices to determine when to allow printing. The input minus the threshhold value was used to index into a lookup table to select the output intensity. Design of the down-loadable threshold matrices solved the print consistency problem. The custom hardware ensured that a zero input value did not print and a maximum value printed as a saturated output. These solutions were implemented using custom high-speed logic capable of outputting 66 MegaPels/sec.
Access to the requested content is limited to institutions that have purchased or subscribe to SPIE eBooks.
You are receiving this notice because your organization may not have SPIE eBooks access.*
*Shibboleth/Open Athens users─please
sign in
to access your institution's subscriptions.
To obtain this item, you may purchase the complete book in print or electronic format on
SPIE.org.
INSTITUTIONAL Select your institution to access the SPIE Digital Library.
PERSONAL Sign in with your SPIE account to access your personal subscriptions or to use specific features such as save to my library, sign up for alerts, save searches, etc.