Well, I'll speak for me...the print pipeline on both Mac and Windows is not easily dissected. But one can prove to oneself by doing actual tests. Epson prints at either 360PPI or 720PPI depending on the print settings.
I agree with Jeff on this one. The closest we all can come to understanding what's happening, is by reverse engineering what's going on based on what we can see in the printed result.
If you upsample to 360PPI (if the native rez is less than 360PPI) one can see the result...less aliasing effects with circles and diagonal edges. Same deal if the native rez is above 360PPI but below 720PPI (and you have an Epson pro printer with Finest Detail in the driver). Your results will be better if you upsample in LR or Photoshop to 720PPI and then sharpen.
That's really the key here...do you allow the print pipeline to resample or do you do a proactive upsample then sharpen at the final print size? If you let the print pipeline do the resampling (and use at best Bilinear and prolly Nearest Neighbor) your results are less good. That's easy to prove just by doing prints at various resolutions.
It's as simple as that, and the same goes for Canon and HP printers, at 300 and 600 PPI. It's all a result of the number of ink nozzles available in the print-head, the positioning accuracy of the print-head and the paper feed mechanism. Add to that that it is
much easier to design a dither pattern for blending color nuances between the pure ink colors at two specific resolutions, and the observed effects on print quality, and it's hard to draw any other conclusions based on the empirical evidence.
And yes, I STILL don't know where in the print pipeline the resampling is being done but it's pretty obvious that resampling is being done somewhere. The guys at Epson that tell me it ain't the print driver is believable (regardless of what others have said). But resampling is being done somewhere if the reported rez is not either 360/720 PPI (depending on the driver settings).
There seems to be a difference between the Mac OS and Windows, where the Mac based driver delegates the part of the resampling to some built in OS functionality before feeding the final/resampled data to the printer after dithering. In the Windows driver versions it seems to be a function of the printer driver itself, but nobody really knows besides the Epson/Canon engineers.
Personally, I'm done with the testing...I've proven to myself what I say is correct. You can say whatever you want to say but in my mind, unless you prove it, you are just flapping you're gums. If you image is less than 360PPI at "native resolution" resample to 360PPI and then output sharpen. If your native rez is between 360 to 720, select Finest Detail and resample to 720PPI and then output sharpen. If you don't believe me, test it yourself...
I agree, and for that purpose I've created a printer test target (I'm in the testing phase). The target may be too cruel for average use, but it should show any loss of resolution or resampling artifacts that the print process may generate. Most likely, besides profile conversion issues, the print head alignment and imprecise paper feeding will also add some artifacts, as does ink diffusion in the print medium. I'll be happy to discuss them in
a separate thread.
Here are the current targets for the masochists amongst us:
Test target for 600 PPI printersTest target for 720 PPI printersThe numbers on the targets are calibrated for resolution expressed in cycles/mm when the prints are done at 600/720 PPI respectively (which produces a square target size of 130mm). For the moment it should be enough to know that 5 cycles/mm delivers a
very good print quality at reading distance under normal lighting conditions, and 8 cycles/mm would produce an
excellent print quality. The printers are capable of even better results, but that can only be exploited for real images with very good output sharpening.
So to get back to this thread's topic, and answer the OP's question, if you don't resample different sized files then they either display/print at different output sizes, or they will get resampled behind the scenes, and both make it harder/impossible to really compare image quality.
Cheers,
Bart