abuser23,
Please tell me what I'm doing wrong that makes it so hard for you to grasp a simple, well reasoned statement by me.
You always come back with yet another question on the same thing, over and over, and phrasing it in such a way that you seem obsessed with putting words in my mouth.
so the settings in photoshop can not scale the image in anyway?
It is soly done in the printer driver?
Now, I never said that anywhere. Of course you can have Photoshop scale things for you. However you have left the "Scale" box unchecked (correctly), so Photoshop will not scale in this case.
What the printer driver does is an entirely different story. The instant you hit the Print button on that screen shot, then the Fuji/Xerox printer driver kicks in and takes completely over.
I have no idea what said FX printer driver does to prepare the pixels for your affordable Fuji/Xerox printer, nor what said printer does to those prepared (processed by the printer driver) pixels. Please get that through your skull. I don't have access to any FX stuff.
Note that you still have your image resolution at 600 ppi (observe that they're not mislabeling it as "dpi" like you love to do). That's a pretty dense pixel resolution for an entry-level printer or for most printers, as a matter of fact. I have no clue as to whether your affordable Fuji/Xerox printer can handle that. The fact that it can lay printer dots on paper at up to 1,200by2400 dpi is something that you will choose later when the Print button on this dialog box sends you to the FX printer driver options.
Note that your image density is being defined as ppi, pixels per inch, while your units are defined in millimeters in this dialog box. There could be rounding discrepancies there. I don't know in your particular case.
Also, note that your image is not centered on that sheet of paper, but that is a different story.
Please do not ask me any more questions about anything that involves your printer and/or printer driver. I am not familiar with them. Period.
If one mentioned an entry-level ("affordable" as per their blurb) Fuji/Xerox printer in a room full of graphics professionals, one would be laughed out of the room.
Hope I made myself clear. If I didn't, I'm truly sorry, but this has to end right here and now.
Best wishes,
.