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By making the particles smaller and uniform in shape, toner fixing can be achieved at a much lower temperature, preventing paper curling or jamming during the finishing process. Less paper curl means thinner binding of prints to be stapled or stitched, even in large quantities regardless of thickness.
During the fixing process that requires a higher fixing temperature, thick paper absorbs heat, thereby, lowering the fixing temperature. When fixing can occur at a lower fixing temperature the process is not degraded, thus, allowing you to use a wider range of paper thickness. Even thin paper that would normally wrinkle very quickly is far less likely to suffer these effects because the fixing pressure can be lowered.