Label 9x10 Driver Info

In vintage radios, jukeboxes, and early car audio, oval speakers were common. A 9"x10" oval driver is unusual but not impossible. Most common ovals are 4x10, 5x7, or 6x9. A 9x10 would have a massive cone area (approx 70 sq in), larger than a standard 10" round (78 sq in), but shaped to fit a rectangular baffle. If you ever see a "9x10 driver" label on a vintage Jensen, Rola, or Utah speaker, you’ve likely found a custom run for an old theater speaker or a high-end console stereo.

. These drivers act as a bridge, translating your computer's digital designs into instructions that the printer hardware can execute. label 9x10 driver

For 9x10 labels, your printer’s firmware must be version 6.0 or higher. Older firmware has a "hard coded" maximum label length of 8 inches. Even if your PC driver says "10 inches," the printer's firmware will reject the print job. In vintage radios, jukeboxes, and early car audio,