How to print double sided manually when your copier lacks duplex

TutorialOlder devicesOffice workflow9 min read

Older office MFPs and entry level desktop printers often lack an automatic duplex unit. Double sided printing still works but the user becomes the duplex mechanism: print the odd pages, flip the stack, reload, print the even pages. Done correctly, it produces output indistinguishable from automatic duplex. Done incorrectly, half the pages come out upside down or in the wrong order.

The six step manual duplex workflow

1

Open the print dialog and find the manual duplex setting

Most drivers include a "Print on both sides (manual)" option under layout or duplex settings. If absent, the equivalent is to print "Odd pages only" then "Even pages only" as two separate jobs.

2

Select binding edge

Long edge binding suits document style output (the spine runs down the long edge). Short edge binding suits landscape booklet or calendar style output (the spine runs across the short edge). Wrong selection produces back pages that read upside down.

3

Print odd pages first

The driver sends pages 1, 3, 5, 7 etc. to the device. The output stack lands with page 1 on top, page 3 below it, and so on.

4

Take the output stack and reinsert into the paper tray

Which way to flip depends on the device's paper handling. Most office MFPs feed paper face down from the top of the input tray. After printing odd pages face down, you take the stack from the output tray, keep the same order, and reinsert in the input tray.

5

Confirm orientation matches the prompt on the device touchscreen

Most devices display an orientation diagram on the touchscreen when manual duplex is in progress. Match the diagram exactly. Skipping this check is the most common source of upside down back pages.

6

Confirm and let even pages print

The driver sends pages 2, 4, 6, 8 etc. They print on the reverse of the odd pages. Output should land with page 2 facing up on top of page 1.

The two flip directions explained

Long edge bind

Flip the stack along the long edge (left to right rotation). Back pages read in the same orientation as front pages. Standard for book style documents.

Short edge bind

Flip the stack along the short edge (top to bottom rotation). Back pages read upside down relative to front pages, which is correct for calendar style or booklet style binding.

Why manual duplex still has a place

Three scenarios make manual duplex worthwhile despite the labour. Old equipment without an automatic duplex unit handles small duplex jobs at no additional cost. Heavy stock (above 200 gsm) cannot pass through automatic duplex units; manual duplex is the only route. Special media including pre printed letterhead second sides sometimes require manual handling.

For volumes under 30 pages per session, manual duplex on an older device takes around 5 minutes and saves 50% paper compared to single sided printing. Beyond that volume, the labour case for upgrading to an auto duplex device becomes harder to ignore.

Common manual duplex errors

ErrorCauseFix
Back pages upside downStack flipped wrong directionReprint with opposite flip direction
Pages in wrong order on second sideStack reversed during flipKeep stack order during flip; do not reshuffle
Multi feed on second passToner still warm; sheets stuckWait 1 to 2 minutes before reloading
Print on top of existing printStack reinserted printed side up when device expects printed side downConfirm device convention; reread the touchscreen prompt
Jam on second passSheets curled from first pass heatFlatten stack between two heavy books for 5 minutes
Test on 2 pages before running 50.Print one duplex test of pages 1 and 2 on a single sheet. Hold up to a light source; confirm page 2 sits behind page 1 in the correct orientation. Once verified, scale to the full document. This avoids reprinting a 50 page document because page 2 came out upside down.

Volume thresholds

Manual duplex suits volumes up to about 30 to 50 pages per session. Beyond that, the time and curl management become limiting. For routine duplex work above that threshold, an automatic duplex MFP is the better investment. Most office MFPs in the under 1,000 euro range now include automatic duplex; only entry level desktop printers and older devices lack it.

Heavy stock manual duplex still risks fuser stress.Above 200 gsm, even manual duplex puts paper through the fuser twice, and the second pass can produce toner adhesion issues from cumulative heat. For heavy stock duplex above 50 sheets, professional outsourcing is the safer route.

Source document considerations

The source document should be designed knowing it will be manually duplexed. Three small choices help.

Avoid critical content close to the binding edge

Manual duplex registration tolerance is around 1 to 2 mm. Content close to the binding edge may not align between front and back pages. Keep important text at least 20 mm from the binding edge.

Use page numbers

If the manual duplex job goes wrong and pages need re sequencing, page numbers make reassembly possible. Without them, a misordered stack is much harder to fix.

Avoid heavy ink coverage on front pages

Heavily inked front pages bleed slight curl into the second pass. Lighter front pages (below 5% coverage) curl less and feed cleaner on the reverse.

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