Bar Code Verification
As AIDC applications become more and more critical to a company’s
success, the cost of bar code scanning failure becomes more significant.
Such giant merchandisers as Wal-Mart, for example, have become famous for
leveling whopping fines of $50,000 or more on suppliers whose product labels
repeatedly misread. Consequently, bar code verification systems, once exclusively
used by printers and label vendors, are now commonly used for on-site printing.
Verifiers will grade a symbol unacceptable or by degrees of acceptability
based upon ANSI’s published criteria, known as the Bar Code Print Quality
Guideline. Verification devices can be integrated in-line, attached to the
printer while monitoring the quality of every printed label or they can be
used in a standalone configuration to audit batches of labels. In either
case, verification can’t completely eliminate bar code performance
problems. Verification can, however, provide a quantitative measure of print
contrast and derive wide-to-narrow ratios, checking printed symbol conformance
against symbology print quality standards.

