In multifunction or all-in-one printers, fax machines, photocopiers
and scanners, an automatic document feeder or ADF is a feature which takes
several pages and feeds the paper one page at a time into a scanner or copier,
allowing the user to scan, and thereby copy, print, or fax, multiple-page
documents without having to manually replace each page. Most copiers allow
scanning on the flatbed or platen (the "glass") or through a document
feeder. The vast majority of fax machines have an ADF, allowing the unattended
sending of multi-page faxes. Due to the ubiquity of ADF in fax machines, some
fax machine owners use the fax machine as a scanner, faxing multi-page
documents to themselves. Document feeders are described by speed, in pages per
minute or ppm, and capacity, usually in a range from 10 sheets to 200.
There are two kinds of document feeders capable of two-sided
(duplex) scanning: a reversing automatic document feeder or RADF scans one side
of a page, then flips it and scans the other side. A duplexing automatic
document feeder or DADF scans both sides in one pass. The advantage of the DADF
is faster speed for two-sided originals. RADFs and DADFs are rated in images
per minute (IPM), the number of sides they can scan each minute.
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