Campus ID News
Card, mobile credential, payment and security
FEATURED
PARTNERS
retransfer avansia slider 1

Retransfer ups the ante for desktop card printers

CampusIDNews Staff   ||   Apr 02, 2015  ||   , , ,

Autumn Cafiero Giusti, contributing editor, Avisian Publications

Fast, cheap or good. The old adage says you typically can’t have all three. The same has been true when choosing a card printing technology, but things are changing.

The direct-to-card method has long filled the “fast and cheap” niche. The newer retransfer printing method delivers the “good” in the form of superior image quality. More recently, it’s become cheaper, too.

Lower costs and a rise in chip card use are driving up the demand for retransfer card printers. In addition to the high-quality images, the technology also enables over-the-edge printing and printing on uneven surfaces often found when cards contain chips or other embedded technologies.

This is due to the way color is applied to the card during in the imaging process.

The direct-to-card method uses a print head to apply dye from a printer ribbon directly onto a plastic card. This tends to be faster and less expensive, but often provides a noticeably lower quality image and misprinting on uneven surfaces. It also causes wear and tear on the sensitive and costly print head, particularly as it encounters hard edges and surface imperfections.

The retransfer method addresses these problems by applying the ribbon’s dye to a separate clear transfer film. This film is then attached to the plastic card as a single overlay so the print head never comes into contact with imperfections in the card’s surface or its hard edges.

Today, secure applications from driver licenses to government IDs and corporate badges to student ID cards are moving to retransfer printing at an increasing rate.

Companies offer both

Evolis is the latest card printer manufacturer to leverage retransfer technology with the addition of its Avansia printer. Evolis introduced the new line of printers late in 2014 after seeing an increase in demand for higher quality cards, especially in government applications.

“Avansia gives us access to different segments in transportation and government that we didn’t have access to before,” says Gerardo Talavera, managing director for the Americas for France-based Evolis.

The Avansia printer line complements the company’s existing line of direct-to-card printers, and as Talavera says, the two printing technologies cater to the needs of different markets.

He says retransfer printing generally serves markets that require cards with higher durability, security and image quality. Direct-to-card offers a lower cost alternative for high-volume print jobs in which a card’s life span and image quality are of less concern, such as short-term ID badges and loyalty cards.

What makes the Avansia printer noteworthy is that it prints images at an ultra-high 600 dpi resolution, whereas the current standard for most high-resolution printers is 300 dpi. Talavera expects 600 dpi to rapidly become the new standard for ID printing.

Government and financial institutions prefer retransfer printing because it enables printing on different card materials with uneven surfaces and embedded chips. To further improve image quality in such situations, Talavera says the Avansia includes a built-in card flattener.

Retransfer printing is a more complex technology and costs more. It tends to be about 40% more expensive, Talavera says, for both printing costs and the price of the unit itself.

Direct-to-card printing is ideal for inexpensive, entry-level print jobs that might require single-side printing with only a photo and text, such as convention ID badges, he says. There’s also greater speed with the direct-to-card method, which can make it more appealing for larger printing jobs.

The Avansia prints 140 cards per hour while direct-to-card printers produce 180 cards per hour.

Pages: 1 2 3

|| TAGS:
Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

RECENT ARTICLES

Amy Surprenant, HID Global
Jun 26, 25 / ,

Effective project management key to GWU mobile credential launch

In a recent interview, HID Global’s Amy Surprenant discusses the project management component of the mobile credential launch at George Washington University (GWU). With 26,000 faculty, staff, and students, the project marked a significant milestone for the institution and its partners, including HID, CBORD, and various on-campus departments and vendors. The deployment of HID Mobile […]
replace allegion reader module
Jun 26, 25 / ,

FIT and Denison both go mobile, but with very different starting points

Denison University and Florida Institute of Technology (FIT) rolled out mobile credentials to students and staff across their campuses. The projects were very different, however, because of the existing reader infrastructure on the two campuses. Each partnered with Allegion and Transact + CBORD to deliver the new digital IDs – stored in Apple Wallet or […]
Jessica Bender, Palm Beach State College
Jun 19, 25 / , ,

Palm Beach State decides mobile credentials are not right for their campus

Palm Beach State College’s campus card office has opted to forego mobile credentials and stick with their longtime magstripe cards. While the decision may seem unusual to some, Jessica Bender, the college’s auxiliary services manager, explains to CampusIDNews the rationale and the research that went into it. With a student population of 40,000, the college […]
CIDN logo reversed
The only publication dedicated to the use of campus cards, mobile credentials, identity and security technology in the education market. CampusIDNews – formerly CR80News – has served more than 6,500 subscribers for more than two decades.
Twitter

Attn: friends in the biometrics space. Nominations close Friday for the annual Women in Biometrics Awards. Take five minutes to recognize a colleague or even yourself. http://WomenInBiometrics.com

Feb. 1 webinar explores how mobile ordering enhanced campus life, increased sales at UVA and Central Washington @Grubhub @CBORD

Load More...
Contact
CampusIDNews is published by AVISIAN Publishing
315 E. Georgia St.
Tallahassee, FL 32301
www.AVISIAN.com[email protected]
Use our contact form to submit tips, corrections, or questions to our team.
©2025 CampusIDNews. All rights reserved.