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#11
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| Put what little brain you have in gear before allowing your knees to jerk, dickless. The MAN is talking about laser printer refills. |
#12
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The solid ink, or wax based printers have some positives and negatives, depending upon your needs. The cost per print is very competitive. The amount of e-waste produced is quite low, since there aren't any toner or inkjet cartridges. The main consumable is the waxy ink itself. The quality is constantly improving and comes close to a color laser. They have sped them up quite a bit, but they are still relatively noisy. They need to be kept on all the time to make best use of ink, which is purged if the system cools down too much from being off. They can print on most print surfaces, even colored ones, without losing the color completely. The deep sleep mode, however, is low wattage. The other consumables aren't needed for a relatively long time, aren't many and aren't an arm and a leg. The negatives are, the ink is still not as well fade resistance as high quality inks can be. The color rendition is not quite as good as laser, the inks are waxy feeling and can chip off paper iron very cold weather. Laminations probably not a good option, since the ink can melt during a hot mounting or lamination. Art Al Bunny wrote: On Mar 27, 2:46 pm, Tony <TonytheTigurr... (AT) aim (DOT) com> wrote: "Ken" <Reply to NG only> wrote: Hear plenty about at refilling inkjets but does anyone have good or bad experience refilling colour lasers? Ken Plenty of people successfully do it. Like inkjet cartrdiges, some are easy and some are tricky and there are some imperatives like emptying the waste toner compartment (on most cartridges) and often parts need to be replaced as well as the toner. You would need to research the printer model you have, or plan to buy, because of the huge differences between manufacturers and models. Tony MS MVP Printing/Imaging I've toyed with the idea of moving up to a laser myself, but it's the complication of those "other parts" that has bothered me. Parts are not cheap or available on every corner either. I'd need to have other backup printers. The thought of a solid ink printer is appealing too, but similar issues come into play. Would you care to comment on the solid ink devices? |
#13
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I've toyed with the idea of moving up to a laser myself, but it's the complication of those "other parts" that has bothered me. Parts are not cheap or available on every corner either. I'd need to have other backup printers. The thought of a solid ink printer is appealing too, but similar issues come into play. Would you care to comment on the solid ink devices? |
#14
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The color rendition is not quite as good as laser, the inks are waxy feeling and can chip off paper iron very cold weather. |
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Laminations probably not a good option, since the ink can melt during a hot mounting or lamination. |
#15
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On Mar 29, 6:37 am, Arthur Entlich <e-printerh... (AT) mvps (DOT) org> wrote: The solid ink, or wax based printers have some positives and negatives, depending upon your needs. The cost per print is very competitive. The amount of e-waste produced is quite low, since there aren't any toner or inkjet cartridges. The main consumable is the waxy ink itself. The quality is constantly improving and comes close to a color laser. They have sped them up quite a bit, but they are still relatively noisy. They need to be kept on all the time to make best use of ink, which is purged if the system cools down too much from being off. They can print on most print surfaces, even colored ones, without losing the color completely. The deep sleep mode, however, is low wattage. The other consumables aren't needed for a relatively long time, aren't many and aren't an arm and a leg. The negatives are, the ink is still not as well fade resistance as high quality inks can be. The color rendition is not quite as good as laser, the inks are waxy feeling and can chip off paper iron very cold weather. Laminations probably not a good option, since the ink can melt during a hot mounting or lamination. Art Al Bunny wrote: On Mar 27, 2:46 pm, Tony <TonytheTigurr... (AT) aim (DOT) com> wrote: "Ken" <Reply to NG only> wrote: Hear plenty about at refilling inkjets but does anyone have good or bad experience refilling colour lasers? Ken Plenty of people successfully do it. Like inkjet cartrdiges, some are easy and some are tricky and there are some imperatives like emptying the waste toner compartment (on most cartridges) and often parts need to be replaced as well as the toner. You would need to research the printer model you have, or plan to buy, because of the huge differences between manufacturers and models. Tony MS MVP Printing/Imaging I've toyed with the idea of moving up to a laser myself, but it's the complication of those "other parts" that has bothered me. Parts are not cheap or available on every corner either. I'd need to have other backup printers. The thought of a solid ink printer is appealing too, but similar issues come into play. Would you care to comment on the solid ink devices? I think you are right and wrong on certain things. I have a Xerox Phaser 8550 DP that I got for $800 after rebate. This thing is great. It only melts ink once, which is the first time you plug it in ever. Once you plug it in, do not unplug, and replug it in, as that will waste ink. But once you have it in, it has 3 modes - Full Ready - Standby - and a "Sleep" mode. The Standby and Sleep mode use VERY little power, the ready using a little more, and the actual printing mode, which can at times use 1300 Watts of power (Yeah, thats almost 10 Amps). Also, its like 80 pounds. There aren't as many consumables compared to laser. Every 30K pages, you replace an oil drum which costs $150. You can buy the solid ink made my Media Sciences, which Page Computers sells for dirt cheap. I buy it from them all the time. Lastly, there is a waste tray that Xerox says you need to replace, but you don't. It only melts ink once when you turn it on, so ink never builds up. I have printed over 10K pages, and the printer has warmed up and went into standby over 100 times, and I have only had 1 drop of ink wasted. The quality of printing is amazing! The regular mode is 1200X1200 DPI, with the option of 2400X2400 DPI in best quality mode. At 1200 DPI regular mode, I print about 20 full page, color images per minute!!! And it prints it in a glossy manner that looks like it came from a photo shop. And the prints will never fade or go away like laser. I dropped an image in a puddle of water for 2 weeks, and the paper all around the print was deteoriated, but the actual print was still together! The ink doesn't do too well with high heat or sharp folds. (Folding paper w/ text is fine, but full page images, you get a wax break line). The thing is noisy when printing. (Mainly the really fast paper handling). But it makes no noise otherwise. It has a 525 page paper tray as well as a 100 pg accesory tray. When you put paper in the tray, the printer detects the paper size, and asks you for example ("Is this a Number 10 Envelope - Yes or No). The software automatically coordinates this with the printer, so no funbling with paper config is needed. With a small business, this is also good. After printing large reports, the printer gives me an invoice for the printjob (It figures in paper cost, oil drum cost, cost of all three colors and black ink used in printing, and any extra surcharges you want to add (Eg. Power usage)). It Tells you percent coverage per job and ink usage and everything. I highly reccomend this printer. |
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