Printing Tabs - Straight or Reverse

ReproElectroProspero

Well-known member
When printing documents with tabs on your digital machines, which kind of tab style do you prefer?

This has become a recent debate in our shop. Some say that reverse tabs are the best, while others say that straight tabs are the best.

In my experience, it doesn't really matter, but I was curious if there was a prevailing opinion on the issue.
 
For coherence when printing, reverse tabs are best, as it produces tabs that are in logical order when evaluating print output. I typically print them "per bank of 5".

However, when a project is not a full bank of tabs, I think that starts to make less sense, and have wanted to order non-collated tabs at times, as I have, from projects that had some non-full bank sets of tabs, a lot of tabs in the 1 and 2 positions (which are also the 4 and 5 positions), and only full sets with the 3 position. It have to cannibalize a lot of full sets to get that middle tab.

I think what makes the most sense is to order a bunch of reverse-collated tabs, and a hefty supply of middle tabs, but I have not yet done that.
 
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I don’t normally run precut tabs these days, but the prevailing need for one direction of the other was often dictated by which machine or paper drawer I intended to feed from.
 
When printing documents with tabs on your digital machines, which kind of tab style do you prefer?

This has become a recent debate in our shop. Some say that reverse tabs are the best, while others say that straight tabs are the best.

In my experience, it doesn't really matter, but I was curious if there was a prevailing opinion on the issue.
If I print them from the bypass tray the printer wants reverse collate. From tray 2 or 3 it's forward collate.

Beyond this I don't see how it makes any real difference though
 

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