Digital printing devices may produce printed pages at a different rate than their nominal speed due to various factors. These include but are not limited to host computer, driver, application, operating system, type of connection to the printer (USB, Ethernet, wireless), and the computing power of the device. In addition, job characteristics such as black-and-white vs. color, the number of pages to be printed, single-sided or double-sided output, quality setting, number of copies, paper type and size, document content, and document complexity can affect print speed.
ISO/IEC 24734 specifies a method for measuring the productivity of digital printing devices using various test files, office applications, and print job characteristics on plain paper in default mode. It is applicable to black-and-white and color devices, and to single-function and multi-function devices, regardless of print technology (e.g. inkjet, laser, etc).
ISO/IEC 24734 enables manufacturers of digital printing devices to measure the productivity of different digital printing devices with a consistent measurement method.