FPK1
Line Up and Wait
Costco has $100 off on HP Color Laserjet and Best Buy has $50 off Canon Color Laserjet. I prefer Canon.
And the drum is also an expensive wear item with a finite lifespan. Those two factors combined can make it more expensive than inkjets.
Not universally true. As a counterexample the HP M203DW uses the HP 30A toner cartridge plus the HP 32A drum:Uuh, the HP printers, the drum is part of the toner cartridge and gets replaced.
on sale at costco until feb 26Another vote for an Epson Ecotank. When our old Canon printer finally needed to be replaced, I checked out a bunch. HP was out of the question due to their focus on gouging for ink. Our local Costco had an Epson multifunction duplex color Ecotank printer. My wife has been beating that thing like a rented mule printing quilting patterns. I don’t thing we’re down to the halfway mark on the ink tanks yet. I’ve been impressed with the performance and ease of use, especially scanning multi page documents.
you guys are hilarious. These things at the residential end are priced as loss leaders. They are cheap for you to buy so they can sell you consumables. You pay for one or the other. If you dont want higher priced consumables, then you end up in the commercial space - higher volume printing at lower costs with signicantly more expensive printers with larger ink options (which are even more expensive, but they come in much larger volumes). So pick your poison. Yeah, there are some companies with much smaller market share that try and pinch in the options (namely brother, etc). But the big guys - epson, canon, and HP make their money on consumables on the home/consumer side and less so on the larger business printers.
I think your information is dated, or you're referring to really low end laser printers - say sub $200. The commercial printer space is very competitive, and entry level models are very inexpensive for lasers. They're pretty much commodities, and anyone that can afford to fly an airplane can afford a commercial laser printer. Commercial printers are made by HP, Xerox, Cannon, and Lexmark. All four make money selling printers, but that's not all they want to do, for corporate users as well. They want to sell "printing services" and talk the execs into buying a contract to cover the printer, supplies, and maintenance. They want the revenue stream. That's been going on forever. Not sure if it's still true, but some high end printers Xerox wouldn't sell. They would only lease them, with a service contract.
The cost per page, in terms of consumables, between the sub $400 home lasers and the commercial printers isn't that much. Maybe $.05 vs $.02/page or something, for black and white. Yes, some toners are $100 for low end printers, and easily $150-250+ for larger printers, but the toners have comparable page costs. The difference is that the commercial printers are rated to print at something like 100k+ pages/month, which means they'll reliably do 10k, and they'll last forever for the average home office user. You're paying more money for higher reliability mechanicals. Even some of the $200 lasers seem pretty well built, particularly to me Xerox and Canon.
Thinking about this again, the advantage for the people reading this is probably just the convenience. If you have a little laser printer, you leave it off most of the time, once a week you print something. You turn it on, it warms up and in 20 seconds you have the paper in your hand. With an inkjet, there's an X% chance that you have to f**k around with it to get it to go. For me, X is about 20. And I'm speaking of anything from $100 home printers to $5k HP plotters. The technology around ink is just to be a PITA.
I think your information is dated, or you're referring to really low end laser printers - say sub $200. The commercial printer space is very competitive, and entry level models are very inexpensive for lasers. They're pretty much commodities, and anyone that can afford to fly an airplane can afford a commercial laser printer. Commercial printers are made by HP, Xerox, Cannon, and Lexmark. All four make money selling printers, but that's not all they want to do, for corporate users as well. They want to sell "printing services" and talk the execs into buying a contract to cover the printer, supplies, and maintenance. They want the revenue stream. That's been going on forever. Not sure if it's still true, but some high end printers Xerox wouldn't sell. They would only lease them, with a service contract.
The cost per page, in terms of consumables, between the sub $400 home lasers and the commercial printers isn't that much. Maybe $.05 vs $.02/page or something, for black and white. Yes, some toners are $100 for low end printers, and easily $150-250+ for larger printers, but the toners have comparable page costs. The difference is that the commercial printers are rated to print at something like 100k+ pages/month, which means they'll reliably do 10k, and they'll last forever for the average home office user. You're paying more money for higher reliability mechanicals. Even some of the $200 lasers seem pretty well built, particularly to me Xerox and Canon.
Thinking about this again, the advantage for the people reading this is probably just the convenience. If you have a little laser printer, you leave it off most of the time, once a week you print something. You turn it on, it warms up and in 20 seconds you have the paper in your hand. With an inkjet, there's an X% chance that you have to f**k around with it to get it to go. For me, X is about 20. And I'm speaking of anything from $100 home printers to $5k HP plotters. The technology around ink is just to be a PITA.
Not universally true. As a counterexample the HP M203DW uses the HP 30A toner cartridge plus the HP 32A drum:
https://www.hp.com/us-en/shop/pdp/hp-laserjet-pro-m203dw-printer
Brings back memories of dumping a bag of rice into a 9700 toner separator to clean it out. Good times.I worked for Xerox back in the day where we polished the drum as part of a PM visit.
Brings back memories of dumping a bag of rice into a 9700 toner separator to clean it out. Good times.
You want a Brother laser wireless printer capable of double sided printing as a minimum, after that it’s just bells and whistles.
Brings back memories of dumping a bag of rice into a 9700 toner separator to clean it out. Good times.
I had a customer who bought a well used 9700. No Xerox maintenance. That fell to me. Learned a lot from that. Later on we signed a contract to maintain a couple hundred little Xerox lasers. It’s been so long I don’t even remember the model, but it fused the toner with a quartz lamp, no fused roller. Produced a kind of sorta raised print. We serviced those with zero support and outright hostility from Xerox, who would not sell us parts or tools.I worked on the 3600/7000/7700 line.
Good times.
...Laser printers have some disadvantages. They're not really portable. Moving them after the toner has been installed isn't a great idea. They're also not great in dusty environments, especially if the dust is conductive. They're pretty crappy for photos, generally speaking.
Old HP laserjets, 4 or earlier, are great, but I don't know if anyone still makes consumables for them. I wouldn't buy a newer HP. I did buy a new color Xerox, and so far it's been great. My last inkjet was a Canon, and it was great. Color photos were beautiful.
I run labels through my Brother HL-L6200DW with no problems.If you have a stock of inkjet consumables (Avery labels, for example) at best they won't survive the heat of a laser printer. At worst you may damage the laser printer.
I had a customer who bought a well used 9700. No Xerox maintenance. That fell to me. Learned a lot from that. Later on we signed a contract to maintain a couple hundred little Xerox lasers. It’s been so long I don’t even remember the model, but it fused the toner with a quartz lamp, no fused roller. Produced a kind of sorta raised print. We serviced those with zero support and outright hostility from Xerox, who would not sell us parts or tools.
Good times.
I run labels through my Brother HL-L6200DW with no problems.
Perhaps the problem you personally observed has to do with the specific labels or the specific printer you were using.
I had a customer who bought a well used 9700. No Xerox maintenance. That fell to me. Learned a lot from that. Later on we signed a contract to maintain a couple hundred little Xerox lasers. It’s been so long I don’t even remember the model, but it fused the toner with a quartz lamp, no fused roller. Produced a kind of sorta raised print. We serviced those with zero support and outright hostility from Xerox, who would not sell us parts or tools.
Good times.
If you have a stock of inkjet consumables (Avery labels, for example) at best they won't survive the heat of a laser printer. At worst you may damage the laser printer.
Ah. Found it. Xerox 4045. Printer/scanner/copier. I swear there is no fuser roller. Don’t know what they were thinking.The machines I worked on had a roller, that was heated by a quartz lamp inside it.
The printers were fairly lucrative, and I’d been maintaining printers since the IBM 1403 N1. The lasers were the absolute worst though. EVERYTHING was caked with toner. Every tool, every pair of jeans. The coolest I worked on was a couple of Siemens cold fusion lasers. They used HCFC solvent vapor instead of heat for fusing.a friend at my club recently retired from years of being hardware support (Dec, Compaq, HP) Early on he learned to completely avoid printer maintenance, instead only doing screens, drives, power supplies, etc.