Showing posts with label inkjet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inkjet. Show all posts

HP Photosmart 8750 Large-Format Professional Photo Printer (Q5747A#ABA) Review

HP Photosmart 8750 Large-Format Professional Photo Printer (Q5747A#ABA)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I upgraded to this printer from the Epson Stylus Photo 2000p, which was an excellent printer. I have now had the opportunity to print many dozens of large format high quality prints with the HP 8750.
My first print out of the machine won overall top honors in a photo competition, and I have had many other prizewinning prints from the HP 8750 in the 6 months I have owned it.
I have had superb results from this printer right out of the box. The color gradations and photo detail are as close to flawless and I have seen from any inkjet. Speed is excellent for normal size text or text plus graphic printing, and good for large format highest quality photo printing. 11 by 17 inch prints take about 4 minutes, which way better than the 20-30 minutes the Epson 2000p took.
Color calibration is not absolutely necessary, since right out of the box my colors were excellent at default settings. To fully realize the enormous potential of this printer, it is necessary to calibrate your monitor.
"Borderless" and "borderless auto-fit" print settings produce unpredicatable results, sometimes leaving the images cut off at the edges or printing a bit off -center. When you are printing large images, I recommend you print a cheap proof on plain paper first to avoid wasting ink, paper, time, and money. The HP 8750 allows this with the "fast proof" print setting that will crank out a proof in seconds flat.
I found the the printer uses a lot of #102 (photo grey) ink cartridges at 30 bucks a pop. All of the ink carts are expensive and undersized for a large format printer, which is a shame and a source of significant expense to the user. Naturally, best results are expected with Premium photo papers from HP, which are also "trez cher" at about $1.50 a page for the 11 by 17's.
If you get this printer, get ready to exchange your gold coins for gold-medal-winning prints!

Click Here to see more reviews about: HP Photosmart 8750 Large-Format Professional Photo Printer (Q5747A#ABA)

HP Photosmart 8750 Large-Format Professional Photo Printer (Q5747A#ABA)

Buy Now

Click here for more information about HP Photosmart 8750 Large-Format Professional Photo Printer (Q5747A#ABA)

Read More...

Olympus P-330N Photo Printer Review

Olympus P-330N Photo Printer
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I have had this printer for quite a while now. It prints unbelievable pictures that compare to the Kodak photo lab. After I am done taking my shots with my Olympus C-3030zoom camera I insert the smartmedia card directly into the printer, then I plug the printers video output into my television. This printer has some really neat editing features that can be used without your computer. Of course it works really well with my computer. All around it is a really excellent product. I have been impressing my neighbors, and family with this printer. I am getting ready to sell off my regular film eqipment. I just aquired an Olympus P400 digital printer, and all I can say is OHHHHHHHHHHHHHH MY.................................

Click Here to see more reviews about: Olympus P-330N Photo Printer

Olympus's P-330N photo printer provides true photographic output, with24-bit color dye-sublimation printing, allowing you to print snapshot-sizedphotos right from your desktop.
You can print photos from files of up to 10 MB (JPEG) or 20 MB (TIFF) fromseveral sources, including SmartMedia cards, your PC, and even yourtelevision. With the printer's video input and output terminals, photopreviews can be displayed on your TV screen, and the printer can serve as avideo printer. With a SmartMedia card, you can print photos by simplyinserting your card into the printer, eliminating the usual mess of cordson your desk.
The printer only prints on one size of paper (4.5 by 3.375 inches), but you canprint your choice of one, four, nine, or 16 shots per page. Print speed canbe slow, producing a 4.5-by-3.375-inch full color print in roughly 2minutes, but the crisp quality and brilliant color make it worth the wait.The P-330N also features a laminated output capability so you can preserveyour favorite photos. Both Mac and PC compatible, the printer includes aone-year warranty.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Olympus P-330N Photo Printer

Read More...

Canon PIXMA iP4700 Premium Inkjet Photo Printer (3742B002) Review

Canon PIXMA iP4700 Premium Inkjet Photo Printer (3742B002)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I purchased this printer after a lot of research here on Amazon and elsewhere. This printer is replacing an old Epson Stylus Photo 780 that I've had for years. I was really unhappy with the Epson because the ink heads clogged up constantly. I also wanted the newest printer possible, since I've had problems with other devices not updating their drivers, so this printer fit the bill.
The Canon printer has been wonderful for me so far. It was easy to set up and install and worked right away. I'm using Snow Leopard on a Mac, so I had to download the actual driver from Canon's web site, but this is easy to do and pretty self-explanatory.
I love that the printer is all enclosed. The regular paper sits in a tray at the bottom, and everything can be closed up so that dust doesn't get into it. Photo paper is loaded at the rear.
This printer has individual ink cartridges, a plus in my opinion.
I am using it lightly (10-15 regular color pages, 1-2 photos per week) so I have not dented the supply level on the ink cartridges, and can't really comment on how fast the ink runs out. The print quality is pretty good for the regular paper, and very good for photos. I was very impressed with the photos that I printed, they were sharp and the color was great.
The software drivers are adequate and not too confusing. I found this printer very easy to use and of good quality. I'm very happy with it, and it's miles better than my old Epson.


Click Here to see more reviews about: Canon PIXMA iP4700 Premium Inkjet Photo Printer (3742B002)

Stylish Photo Printer with 5 Individual Ink Tanks and Built-in Auto Duplex Printing.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Canon PIXMA iP4700 Premium Inkjet Photo Printer (3742B002)

Read More...

Canon Pixma MP520 Photo All-On-One Inkjet Printer (2178B002) Review

Canon Pixma MP520 Photo All-On-One Inkjet Printer (2178B002)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
It has both front and rear paper feeders. I can load two types of papers and/or envelops and select the source either with a button or through computer. This is the very best part. What I hate about HP printers: they all have only front feeder. Because front-fed papers must go a 180 degree sharp turn around, they are never able to do trouble-free envelop and double-side printing. Prints always miss top or bottom, because paper is fed either too fast or too slow, absolutely no consistency. If you print large international mailing labels/forms, you know what I mean. Paper jam is your routine with HP. Canon has no such problems at all, at least with its rear feeder.
It uses 4 separated ink cartridges for all 4 colors. With those 3-in-one cartridges, I was always scared to print graphics, because one color always went faster and the entire cartridge must be thrown away. Now I can just replace a single color and I can physically see ink level!!! Even better, these cartridges are very easy to refill. I must admit that the color cartridges popped out by themselves and I think I'll call Canon like the other reviewer. With HP, cartridges are built with print headers, making them very expensive, difficult to refill and, if doable, for few times only before the printer head got clogged and must be replaced.
More expensive Canon all-in-one, such as MP530, MP830 and MX700, are all way too huge! This one is still quite big compared to printer-only models, but I still can put it on my desktop fine. Because it is not so tall and has a flat top, I can put my stationary plate on it; so it is big but does not waste the space.
Cheaper Canon AIO, such as MX300 and MP470, all use the stupid cartridges like HP and you'll pay much more on ink! Before you buy a printer, make sure it uses at least 4 individual cartridges. For Canon current models, it means "8" series cartridges (CLI-8C/M/Y).
I can't list all the good points, just these are enough: only $110, lowest cost on ink, rear feeder (& front!) and not huge. It does all the things for me and it does them all well at the lowest cost. For some people, what it does not do: fax and CD/DVD printing (only for special and more expensive blank disks).
The very similar MP610 can print CD/DVD with an optional CD tray that you can buy from eBay or make your own. MP610 uses one more extra ink, a dye black for color printing for better contrast. MP520 uses only one pigmented black ink that's good for water resistance but slightly less ideal than dye ink for photos. Overall, MP610 produces doubled resolutions over MP520, which really does not matter to me as MP520's resolutions are already superb and it's 4 lb lighter, slightly smaller and $100 less than MP610 and one less ink tank to deal with.
MP610 can also do automatic duplexing while this MP520 can do it manually only. Auto duplex is very cool, but it is very slow compared to manual duplex, so you may end up seldom use it and miss nothing with a MP520.
So, if you do lots of top-quality photo and/or CD/DVD printing, then go with the MP610. If you need fax, add a MX300 just for that function for only $58 from Walmart; don't buy the MP530 etc. - they are huge! If you don't print much, MX300 is the one and the only one you need. Otherwise, stay with MP520. In any case, never go HP. Don't go Epson neither because their integrated printer heads (non-removable) tend to clog and no way to replace or fix. If a Cannon printer head (removable) gets clogged, you can easily take it out and clean it with a bottle of compressed air. I know what I'm talking about.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Canon Pixma MP520 Photo All-On-One Inkjet Printer (2178B002)

The versatile Canon PIXMA MP520 Photo All-in-One inkjet printer lets you preview, scan, copy, and print photographs and documents with one easy machine. This all-in-one printer features a compact, streamlined design that can preview images in high resolution on its two-inch TFT display, scan beautiful images with color resolutions up to 2400 by 4800 dpi, or print photos directly from memory cards, cameras, DV camcorders, or camera phones. The printer's Easy Scroll Wheel makes operation a breeze, while the Auto-Image Fix feature ensures that every photo is stunningly clear and vivid--even when scanning difficult items such as thick notebooks or faded images. In its helpful dual-paper tray, you can neatly store plain and photo paper at the same time.
Just press the Power button and get to work, thanks to the printer's helpful Quick Start design,. Copies come out crisper than ever with the system's Dual Color Gamut Processing Technology. Compatible with Windows Vista, Windows XP, Windows 2000, and Mac OS X 10.2.8 to 10.4.x7 operating systems, this printer comes backed by a 1-year limited manufacturer's warranty.
What's in the Box Pixma MP520 photo all-in-one printer, cross sell sheet, easy setup instructions, quick start guide, setup software and user's guide CD-ROM, user's guide, PGI-5 black ink tank, CLI-8 (cyan/magenta/yellow) ink tank, power cord, print head, and sample media (8.5-by-11.5-inch sheets).

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Canon Pixma MP520 Photo All-On-One Inkjet Printer (2178B002)

Read More...

Canon Pixma Pro9500 Professional Large Format Inkjet Printer (0373B001AA) Review

Canon Pixma Pro9500 Professional Large Format Inkjet Printer (0373B001AA)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I too, ordered this printer before it came out. When it finally arrived, I immediately started printing some landscape pictures that I was anxious to see in large format. I had purchased the Canon 13"x19" Variety Pack to get an idea of which paper worked best with this printer. I immediately settled on the Fine Art Museum Etching paper. The depth of the images when used with this pigment printer is just amazing. They come out looking like oil paintings. I have printed over 100 of these pictures using this paper and have never been disappointed with the results. The cost per print is not cheap, but I think the quality of the prints makes it well worthwhile.
The only problem I have encountered with the printer occured about 10 days after I received it when it completely died. A call to Canon Tech Support quickly determined that it needed to be replaced. I had the replacement two days later and returned the defective unit with no problems.
I just love this printer using this particular paper. I agree that printing to glossy paper did not produce terrific results, but I seldom print to glossy paper anyway.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Canon Pixma Pro9500 Professional Large Format Inkjet Printer (0373B001AA)

Canon PIXMA Pro9500 Photo Printer 13x19 (0373B001AA)

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Canon Pixma Pro9500 Professional Large Format Inkjet Printer (0373B001AA)

Read More...

OKI C9650dn - Printer - color - duplex - LED - Tabloid Extra (12 in x 18 in), 12.9 in x 17.8 in - 1200 dpi x 600 dpi - up to 40 ppm (mono) / up to 36 ppm (color) - capacity: 760 sheets - Parallel, USB, 1000Base-T Review

OKI C9650dn - Printer - color - duplex - LED - Tabloid Extra (12 in x 18 in), 12.9 in x 17.8 in - 1200 dpi x 600 dpi - up to 40 ppm (mono) / up to 36 ppm (color) - capacity: 760 sheets - Parallel, USB, 1000Base-T
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I moved up to this printer from an (excellent) Magicolor 3100 printer.
My basic requirements were large format printing (11x17), cover paper
handling, color, speed and duplexing. The printer arrived palleted.
First, the printer is very heavy, and two of us had difficulty setting
it up. I would almost recommend a lift table to handle it. I plan to
get the high capacity feeder both for the extra trays, and also for a
way to get it around, since it is really to heavy to lift without a
dolly or other aid. The HCF has wheels on it, and basically converts
the printer to a roll around waist height machine.
The C9650 is a LED printer, meaning that it uses a bar of LEDs to do
the same job as a rotating laser. This both gives it both less rotating
parts as well as simpler mechanics. The bar has 66000 leds (600x11"),
and there are four of them, one for each color. There is a version of
this printer with 1200x1200 resolution, which means a LED bar with
twice the number of LEDs, but the price increment is more than the cost
of this printer at almost $4000 (yikes!). The odd sounding 1200x600
resolution of the c9650 printer comes from the fact that although the
LED spacing is fixed, the modulation of the LEDs across the width of
the paper can be increased to 1200 dots per inch easily.
Oki is one of the few makers of pure LED driven printers. I have no idea
why LED based printers have not taken over the market due to the
advantages of this type of print head. Possibly it is just far cheaper
to make scanning heads than LED bars.
The first comparision was to my older 3100 printer, which claims
1200x1200 print resolution against the C96450's 1200x600. There was no
contest, the C9650 was far clearer and sharper than the 3100 on photos
I fed both. In addition, the C9650 produced far less paper curl than
the 3100, a fact I attribute to the simpler paper path of the C9650.
In fact, the C9650 produced copy that was virtually flat. I was
impressed. Low curl is important in my one-off binding application.
The other reason I chose this printer was because it can print cover
stock without complaint (gsm 300 or better). This is due to the ability
of the printer to both input and output such thick material directly
from the sides of the printer with (as the brochure says) almost a
perfectly straight printer path. This also be attributed to the
printers simplified LED print path, but to be fair there are other
non-LED printers that can do this. I use the ability to print covers
to feed a one-off perfect binding operation with a BQ-140 binder and a
Triumph paper cutter. The C9650 will (according to the brochure) also
accept longer than 17" material, which will be essential for 8.5x11"
binds, because of the 1-2" of spine needed at the back of the book.
All in all, so far this is shaping up to be an outstanding printer. The
few negatives I had were the fact that the printer was shipped with the
wrong toner cartridges in the box (they fixed it quicky and said it
has happened before, but it says something about quality control at
Oki), and a salesman at Oki who told me that this printer is considered
a low volume item at Oki, to be discontinued.
The 11x17 market needs this kind of printer. I notice that other
companies, including Xerox, are reselling this printer. One maker is
even marketing it as a "super thick" stock printer (they may modify it
for this purpose). The bottom line is that this is a workhorse printer
able to do jobs that other printers cannot. The large format market is
new, neglected in my opinion, and the large format market with thick
stock ability is only a handfull of machines.
Scott Moore,
San Jose, CA

Click Here to see more reviews about: OKI C9650dn - Printer - color - duplex - LED - Tabloid Extra (12 in x 18 in), 12.9 in x 17.8 in - 1200 dpi x 600 dpi - up to 40 ppm (mono) / up to 36 ppm (color) - capacity: 760 sheets - Parallel, USB, 1000Base-T

###############################################################################################################################################################################################################################################################

Buy NowGet 33% OFF

Click here for more information about OKI C9650dn - Printer - color - duplex - LED - Tabloid Extra (12 in x 18 in), 12.9 in x 17.8 in - 1200 dpi x 600 dpi - up to 40 ppm (mono) / up to 36 ppm (color) - capacity: 760 sheets - Parallel, USB, 1000Base-T

Read More...

HP DesignJet Z3200ps - 44" large-format printer - color - ink-jet - Roll (44 in) - 2400 dpi x 1200 dpi up to 2 min/page (color) - USB, 10/100Base-TX Review

HP DesignJet Z3200ps - 44 large-format printer - color - ink-jet - Roll (44 in) - 2400 dpi x 1200 dpi up to 2 min/page (color) - USB, 10/100Base-TX
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
When I picked the Z3200ps 44" printer is was for these reasons:
1 - I wanted a pigment printer in the lab for long archive prints
2 - I needed a wide color gamut and the Z3200 ps really knocks it out of the park
3 - I like b&w photos but hate it when they turn green or yellow with age
4 - havng used 24" rolls, some charts outgrew them to 36" and finally 44" rolls
5 - media handling. Careful when you walk by this printer. It will pull your shirt off and print on it.
I've had some time to get to know the Z3200ps. It has a buit in rip and 80g disk to store your image once ripped so subsequent prints on various media are a no brainer. I bought an assortment of media from photo paper to banner paper and finally canvas which really made an impression.
The 2100 and 3200 printers use 130ml inks (but HP ships it with 69ml mini-inks like the mini-bar in a hotel). They get it calibrated and alligned but 50% of the ink is gone aftertwards. Fortunately a 20x24 canvas (heavy ink) print only used 3ml from the 1500 ml on board in 12 cartridges.
Yes thats right. 12 ink colors. Well really 11 because the gloss enhancer is clear! And it DOESN'T HAVE CYAN - JUST LIGHT CYAN. It does have magenta and light magenta. Let's cover the 12 inks
CMYPKMK:
c50% dark cyan
Mfull dark magenta
m- 50% dark magenta
Yfull dark Yellow
PK"photo black" - mixes with cmy above to avoid using cmy when dark colors are in photos. doesn't fade away from black
MK Matte black - for text mainly - shows up as matte on glossy media
RGB
GrGreen 100%
BlBLUE (not to be confused with cyan dark - it's not really blue either, more purple than blue)
RdChromatic Red (think fire engine / fast sports cars here)
B&W
LG Light Grey
GGrey (combined with photo black gives you 3 color b&w prints with no color in them - no "off black"
EGloss [E]nhancer - prevents bronzing
Now add them c, M, m, y, PK, MK, Rd, Gn, Bl, Grey, light Grey, Gloss enhancer. Yep even dozen.
You'll be happy to know the gloss enhancer, while sprayed everywhere, is only $55 instead of $78, but a full refill is $911 of all 12 carts. buying ink here on amazon will save you money over hp's price
As for printheads, yes, nozzles clog, yes, there is a cleaning step, and best of all, it knows what nozzles are clogged so with 2000+ It can average them out of the picture and prevent banding until it gets really bad. Each printhead has 2 colors assigned to it, and they are about $55. Now you can also clean just one printhead instead of all 6 of them which saves ink. Left plugged in, the printer automatically runs a periodic nozzle cleaning with minimal waste to keep them clean.
Color calibration is done with an i1 spectrophotometer for the material you are using. Tell your software to let the printer manage color and send adobe rgb 1998 to it. Then tell the printer it's getting adobe 1998 and it must mix and match. It will take a little from each color to make [carl sagan on] billions of colors.
The color gamut of this printer is only missing the metalics (a 13th cartridge would be too much), so you get accurate reproduction. It also comes with a monitor calibration system so what you see is what you get across many media.
The biggest surprise so far was the $1.28/sq ft matt universal canvas. Go for heavy inking and you'd swear an artist slaved all day to render your 12 megapixel dslr raw digtital negative into a painting. I have a roll of 24" canvas loaded now and am going to try some art reproduction with it and a scanner. You also have options to roll on clear sealer (acrylic) or use a brush and acrylic paints to turn the canvas into a real work of art.
If 44" and 12 inks isn't enough HP does make a 60" carriage, but sacrificed the 12 inks down to 8.
CONS:
Here they are
8" of each roll is needed for each new load to do a color calibration (and 20 minutes give or take)
high quality mode is slow as molassas to print
internal cutter can't cut canvas.
Carriage may be 44" but you have 6 bottles of ink on *each* side of that so the printer is wide.
postscript rip is kinda on the slow side but the good news is it keeps the finished jobs in the printers hard disk until you delete them, so you can improve your media choices without another rip and just print.
only has roll or sheetfeed - one sheet at a time. DJ130nr had a paper try, rear feed, front feed, and roll feed that could automatically take out the roll and feed from the paper tray, then revert to roll without a human.
power cords are shorter than the printer is long so be prepared.
squirt and wipe after 3 - 4 passes slows printing while carriage is in service station
Hard to find HP 70 130 ml carts in every color on [...] website - must dig around. Red is no. 73
"chromatic red" which makes me wonder about other no 73 carts
won't take the 300 ml #70 carts for the 5200 (besides wrong colors)
Plus side
Comes with GB ethernet and usb. The GB net is *NICE*
As of 7-2010 HP finally got win 7 to work with this printer. Took long enough. I had to revert to vista when I got this (ugh) and was changing o/s more often than people change underware.
Lots of space to store caibrations for medias you come across
Heavy support for fine art media
Comes with $300 stand in kit and adapters for different core sizes
comes with power cords for every country on earth
200 watts printing, almost nothing in power down mode. Adjustable delay to enter power down.
Nice b&w lcd on front for loading paper and calibrating color
orange cancel button
relatively easy to fix skew problems with the blue lever that opens up the gripper and allignment marks
To sum it up - with the introduction of the Z5200, my bet is the z3200 will drop in price soon and might make a good value then. The 5200 only uses 8 inks and is built on the same chassis as the 3200. Since the 3200 mixes from all 12 inks almost equally you get good life from 12 cartridges. Add to your watched list and watch the price drop - the 5200 was just introduced as I write this.

Click Here to see more reviews about: HP DesignJet Z3200ps - 44" large-format printer - color - ink-jet - Roll (44 in) - 2400 dpi x 1200 dpi up to 2 min/page (color) - USB, 10/100Base-TX

This 12-ink HP Z3200ps Designjet printer, with new HP 73 Chromatic Red ink, delivers long-lasting gallery-quality prints in black and white and color.

Buy NowGet 21% OFF

Click here for more information about HP DesignJet Z3200ps - 44" large-format printer - color - ink-jet - Roll (44 in) - 2400 dpi x 1200 dpi up to 2 min/page (color) - USB, 10/100Base-TX

Read More...

HP PhotoSmart A612 - Printer - color - ink-jet - 1200 dpi x 1200 dpi - capacity: 20 sheets - USB Review

HP PhotoSmart A612 - Printer - color - ink-jet - 1200 dpi x 1200 dpi - capacity: 20 sheets - USB
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I love this little HP printer! It's user friendly and the quality of the prints is awesome.... I can barely distinguish my "home" prints from the ones I order online and pick up at the drugstore. I've also used it to print very professional looking invites and photo greeting cards. I'd give it 5 stars, but you can only feed in one sheet of paper at a time.....the feeder holds lots of paper, but when you try, the printer grabs them all at once. Also, the ink is on the expensive side. Word of advice: Go ahead and splurge on the premium glossy photo paper and you won't go wrong.

Click Here to see more reviews about: HP PhotoSmart A612 - Printer - color - ink-jet - 1200 dpi x 1200 dpi - capacity: 20 sheets - USB

Get prints from wallet to 5 x 7 inches - plus panorama size - with this small, portable printer. Crop, zoom or add creative frames to enhance your photos without a PC, using a 2.4-inch display. The printer detects and automatically removes red eye.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about HP PhotoSmart A612 - Printer - color - ink-jet - 1200 dpi x 1200 dpi - capacity: 20 sheets - USB

Read More...

Lexmark Forms Printer 2580 ( 11C2550 ) Review

Lexmark Forms Printer 2580 ( 11C2550 )
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
These Lexmark forms printers are getting to be hard to find and expensive. Back in the early '90s these were known as IBM Proprinters and sold for a couple hundred bucks in a 24 pin.
Anyone who is using multi-part paper to print forms still needs a good forms printer and these units are tanks! I've owned about 8 of them over the years and worn out the print heads (irreplaceable for the most part since parts are scarce and cost nearly as much as the whole unit).
Lexmark is still making these new units but since demand has segued to ink and laser the price has increased dramatically. Still the same old workhorse with push and pull tractor feed that will handle up to 7 (yes seven) part forms.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Lexmark Forms Printer 2580 ( 11C2550 )

Compact, affordable and easy to set up, the Lexmark Forms Printer 2580 offers performance as fast as 510 cps when printing up to 6-part forms (1 original + 5 copies).

Buy NowGet 17% OFF

Click here for more information about Lexmark Forms Printer 2580 ( 11C2550 )

Read More...

Canon i860 Photo Printer Review

Canon i860 Photo Printer
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
If you are looking for a printer that can print photo-store quality prints quickly, quietly...AND print high-quality text...then look no further...The low cost, separate (and relatively inexpensive) ink tanks, and separate black ink for text are just an added bonus!
I spent months looking and shopping around, and finally settled on the i860 after going to a store and testing the printers side-by-side. True, at the highest photo quality, a lot of these printers will look alike...but after "looking under the hood," I decided the Canon was the way to go...Here is the skinny:
"Top Ten Reasons To Buy This Printer"
(1) Great photo quality prints in a jiffy (some say like 43 seconds, but it seems faster);
(2) Quiet (it almost whispers);
(3) Good print quality on regular text/regular paper;
(4) Easy to set-up, and the documentation is excellent (took me less than 10 minutes);
(5) Fantastic software package that comes with the unit...try the "Easy Web Print" and I guarantee that you won't be disappointed;
(6) Ink tanks are separate (meaning you don't have to replace a whole 3, 4 or 5 color tank when one color runs out) and relatively inexpensive;
(7) The paper that works best with the printer is made by Canon, which is also relatively inexpensive;
(8) Their customer support is phenominal (I had one small issue that turned out to have nothing to do with the printer itself), and their support staff not only knew what they were doing, but I didn't have to hold for an hour;
(9) It's very moderately priced; and
(10) True borderless printing (no perforated paper).
"Top Six Reasons Not To Buy This Printer" (can't think of 10!)
(1) Maximum print size is 8 1/2 x 11. If you like to print posters, find another printer;
(2) No LCD screen, so the printer needs to be controlled from the computer (or Camera if you have PhotoBridge on your camera) and you cannot review pictures on the printer before you print;
(3) No USB or Parallel cable in the box (why not, I ask?);
(4) Photo quality prints do not look great on other papers besides Canon;
(5) It's really big;
(6) The 4x6 paper try is a tad bit awkward;
I hope this helps!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Canon i860 Photo Printer

Note: The Canon i860 is no longer being manufactured. You may want to consider purchasing the newer Canon Pixma iP4000 instead.
If you're a serious photo hobbyist who seeks a single printer that combines home office needs with top-notch color capability, look no further than the Canon i860. Its laser-quality black printing churns out 600 x 600 dpi sheets. And it's fast, with speeds of up to 23 pages per minute. The pigment-based black ink delivers exceptional clarity and legibility, whether you're printing a holiday newsletter or a detailed spreadsheet.
Photo printing is where the i860 really comes in to its own, offering an exceptional 4,800 x 1,200 dpi resolution. With speeds of up to 16 pages per minute, or just 50 seconds for a borderless 4-by-6-inch print. Your images will be strikingly smooth, with clean, vivid tones, thanks to five photo ink tanks that spray ultra fine two-picoliter droplets.
A direct print port, combined with PictBridge and Direct Bubble Jet technology allows you to print images directly from your digital camera or camcorder. Built to handle photo papers of a variety of weights and finishes, the i860 can also handle transparencies, plain or high-resolution paper, and envelopes. Canon includes a one-year warranty with Instant Exchange service.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Canon i860 Photo Printer

Read More...

Epson Stylus Pro 3880 Inkjet Printer (CA61201-VM) Review

Epson Stylus Pro 3880 Inkjet Printer (CA61201-VM)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This printer was purchased to replace an Epson Stylus Pro 4000 that I have been using for about the past 3 years. When the 4000 came out, it was supposed to be technological breakthrough and had multiple rave reviews. Ultimately, I've been disappointed with it, both from a "quality of final print" and "ease of printing" standpoint. The Epson Stylus Pro 3880 is two generations beyond the 4000, and corrects the major flaws of its predecessor.
I consider myself an advanced amateur photographer, having printed all of my own photographs (B&W and color) in the darkroom for more than 25 years. I'm really comparing the results of the Stylus Pro printers to the best results that I could achieve using traditional methods. Digital photography is going to replace 99% of traditional photo processing, so the standard seems fair.
From a print quality standpoint, the SP 4000 suffered from significant bronzing (metallic sheen when viewed at an angle), metamerism (color shifts dependent on lighting) and gloss differential (difference in sheen depending on thickness of ink sprayed in an area). The majority of these flaws have been addressed by the latest generation of ink (Ultrachrome K3 with Vivid Magenta) and the newest printhead. On B&W prints, where bronzing was the biggest issue, bronzing is now completely absent on prints using Epson Exhibition Fiber paper and Ultra Premium Luster. I also don't appreciate any significant color shifts (metamerism) when viewing prints under different lighting conditions or different angles. Gloss differential has been significantly improved, but not completely eliminated. With the SP 4000, the ink would turn glossy surfaces semigloss, leaving a very distracting pattern. With the SP 3880, the only areas with subtle gloss differential are areas where there is no ink at all (washed out highlights). If there is any ink at all on the surface, the print looks even and smooth, even on glossy paper.
The quality of the prints are really quite amazing. For the first time in my life, I looked at a couple of prints that I made in the "Advanced B&W" mode and had to admit that they were as good as anything that I could have produced in the darkroom. The Epson Exhibition Fiber paper (F surface) has a look and feel very similar to the Ilford FB (fiber based) Glossy paper that I used to print on. The color prints are also stunning. Although the Ilfochrome prints I used to make had a level of color depth and saturation that was hard to beat, these SP 3880 prints are at least 98% as good with 20% of the effort and 100% better control (via Photoshop).
The machine itself appears reasonably well built and thoughtfully designed. It's not quite the beast that the 4000 was, but that's mostly a good thing. This machine can actually be lifted by one person and takes up a footprint that's about 20% less than the 4000. The front door where the prints come out does seem a bit flimsy, but with care it should hold up. The only unanswered question for me regards ink jet clogging. The SP 4000 was very difficult to unclog if it sat unused for a week or two. I would estimate that at least half my ink went towards unclogging the print head. I understand that the newest generation is supposed to be better, but I'll find out over the next few months. Right now, the printer is being used nearly daily, trying to reprint all of the pictures that I was 80% satisfied with in the past.
In summary, the Stylus Pro 3880 is a significant advancement from older machines. It might not be enough to justify upgrading from a 3800, but if you're using a 4000/7600/9600 generation machine, you'll never regret it.
Addendum: The one year follow-up!
After one year of printing fairly regularly, I have to say that I am still very pleased with the printer. The most amazing thing, by far, is the fact that the ink jets have never clogged even once. The old SP 4000 clogged even after 5 days of disuse. Although I'm generally printing small photos, I'm actually still on my first set of ink cartridges. I easily went through 5-10 times the amount of ink with the SP 4000. I didn't realize how much ink I was actually wasting clearing the ink jets regularly (in spite of never running a "power" cleaning). My only minor complaint with the printer is still the mild gloss differential. For more critical prints, I've sprayed on PremierArt's Print Shield with good results. No other issues so far and many outstanding prints in both color and B&W.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Epson Stylus Pro 3880 Inkjet Printer (CA61201-VM)

Epson Stylus Pro 3880

Buy NowGet 13% OFF

Click here for more information about Epson Stylus Pro 3880 Inkjet Printer (CA61201-VM)

Read More...

HP H470wbt Officejet Mobile Printer Review

HP H470wbt Officejet Mobile Printer
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The HP H470wbt is HP's answer to the "on the go" printer. If you haven't read the spec you will see this particular incarnation comes with a battery for on the road use. The battery is charged while on the printer much like a laptop.
The overall quality of print is passable but not top of the line nor a good choice if you want nice photo-quality prints.
However, if you need to print normal text or perhaps a page from the internet, it does fine. The pages come out at a fair pace (better than one would expect from a small printer) and the quality is acceptable.
The footprint is relatively small and if you plan to carry around with you, expect to use something like a backpack or camera style backpack for your laptop and the printer.
The blue tooth that comes with it works well enough. Just remember to install the blue tooth drivers then deal with Windows itself (in that order).
The one real caveat relates to small printer small ink cartridges. One has to realize to keep this unit small and consume little power, the cartridges are on the small side. Fortunately, they are easily found at various merchants and not an odd special cartridge(s). There is the option to get slightly larger ones but again, the larger ones are also fairly small in output.
Last on the not so good list - HP insists on some of their inkjets to use flimsy mechanisms for housing the ink cartridges. In this case they have some "wires" bent to work with the install assembly of the cartridges. This is asking for trouble sooner or later.
I have not ran enough paper through to experience any paper feed problems and thus, cannot comment on this. This is an important part and as those who have had laser printers and inkjets know this can be a problem that occurs over time.
Overall the unit is passable and in some respect very nice. I give it three stars rather than four because of the ink install assembly. The blue tooth, compactness, reasonable output are all to be appreciated.

Click Here to see more reviews about: HP H470wbt Officejet Mobile Printer

HP H470wbt Office Jet Mobile Printer. Get the best solution for printing on the go. The HP Officejet H470wbt Mobile Printer series with optional wireless capability provides a complete mobile printing system. Get more done with the worlds fastest mobile printer. With print speeds up to 22 pages per minute /ppm/ black and white and up to 18 ppm color, this printer is way ahead of the competition. Save ink and money our specially formulated inks are designed for efficiency. Plus, this printers HP Vivera Ink cartridge prints more pages than the ink cartridges that support competing mobile printers. Easily print in cars, clients offices, or even airports, with optional Bluetooth and WiFi adapters. Print from a variety of mobile devices including your notebook PC, PDA, digital camera, phone, or memory card using the printers USB port. Count on this rugged, durable printer to perform consistently day in and day out. We drop tested the printer to ensure it can handle the rigors of daily travel and we are confident that you will experience equally impressive results. Experience hassle free printing. Print large jobs easily with the fold up 50 sheet paper feeder. Receive convenient low ink alerts and shop for supplies using HP SureSupply. Improve efficiency and flexibility. The printer works with multiple operating systems including Windows, Macintosh, Palm OS, and more. Plus, with a duty cycle of up to 500 pages a month, it is perfectly calibrated to meet the needs of even the busiest mobile professional.

Buy NowGet 36% OFF

Click here for more information about HP H470wbt Officejet Mobile Printer

Read More...

Epson LQ-2090 24PIN 529CPS-DOTPR WCAR ( C11C559001 ) Review

Epson LQ-2090 24PIN 529CPS-DOTPR WCAR ( C11C559001 )
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I bought this printer for my company to replace a $3500 Epson DFX8000 which is now obsolete and repairing again and again was not a viable option. With that said, I searched for a more economical impact printer to do four-part invoices on continuous sheets. Later, I will go to laser style invoices. For this printer, it does exactly like it advertises and the actual appearance of my invoices has greatly improved with the 24 pin printer head instead of 9 pin. The ribbon has lasted for almost two months on a printer that does 65% of the work for a multi-state company. Once you figure out which font to use, it will double strike for better quality (slower print) or single strike for a faster print job. You have to remember to let the machine park the paper so that the paper thickness sensor resets the printer head and your paper does not jam.
The really bad thing is the fact that it comes with only one tractor assembly. That means that you have to switch the tractor assembly from either the front or the rear for optimum performance. If it came with two, then I could switch paper more conveniently. However, it was well worth the money I spent until I revamp the system and get a good laser printer when business picks up. Since it is a very good printer, I will be able to postpone investing more money.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Epson LQ-2090 24PIN 529CPS-DOTPR WCAR ( C11C559001 )

LQ-2090 Wide-Format Dot Matrix Printer

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Epson LQ-2090 24PIN 529CPS-DOTPR WCAR ( C11C559001 )

Read More...

HP Jetdirect 635N Internal Printer Server. Up To 1000MBPS Through Put. Eio Comp Review

HP Jetdirect 635N Internal Printer Server. Up To 1000MBPS Through Put.  Eio Comp
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
You know things have moved on in the world when your printer does GigE and IPv6! (mine is using both) Card worked out of the box, though I don't run DHCP for IPv6 so had to hand-tweak that. Only downside of this card is it's a bit pricey - you can buy networked laser printers for less these days.

Click Here to see more reviews about: HP Jetdirect 635N Internal Printer Server. Up To 1000MBPS Through Put. Eio Comp

HP Jetdirect 635n IPv6/IPsec Print Server

Buy NowGet 49% OFF

Click here for more information about HP Jetdirect 635N Internal Printer Server. Up To 1000MBPS Through Put. Eio Comp

Read More...

HP Officejet Pro 8500A Premium Wireless e-All-in-One (CM758A#B1H) Review

HP Officejet Pro 8500A Premium Wireless e-All-in-One (CM758A#B1H)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I have only had this printer a few days, and all I can say is "WOW!" First a bit about purchasing from Amazon.com: It's over $100 cheaper than at local office supply stores here (I saved $160 including tax), Amazon's service and delivery are A-1, and the printer arrived in great condition.
Now about the printer: I've never had such a nice printer. In draft mode, it prints about 35 ppm, and the pages are very legible. Color copies are beautiful. For a home based business or even a small business, you can print your marketing materials on this and they will look professionally done. The touch screen is great, the set-up was basically plug and play. The fact that it takes two-sided copies for faxing, copying and scanning saves so much time.
One thing that's lacking: I wish it came with a complete instruction manual, instead of just the fax manual, though.
I love this printer! You should buy one -- from Amazon.com!

Click Here to see more reviews about: HP Officejet Pro 8500A Premium Wireless e-All-in-One (CM758A#B1H)

Create professional-quality color prints and marketing materials for up to 50% lower cost per page and energy use than lasers.Use business apps to print from the Web-PC-free. Print from a mobile device, using HP ePrint.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about HP Officejet Pro 8500A Premium Wireless e-All-in-One (CM758A#B1H)

Read More...

Epson Stylus Photo 1400 Large Format Photo Printer (C11C655001) Review

Epson Stylus Photo 1400 Large Format Photo Printer (C11C655001)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I've had this printer for just a week and I'm amazed at the results. It was easy to set up and is easy to use. I took a look at "Real World Color Management," by Fraser, Murphy, and Bunting, before I started using the printer. It's a helpful book, even if you just skim a few of the early chapters. It helped me to understand the printer's advanced options and to get the results I wanted. You could just use the printer with the out of the box settings, and I suppose it would produce really nice results. I'm an artist, though, and I want to be in control. That's why I bought this printer, I was frustrated with unpredictable results from labs.
A note on ink:
I have been printing on glossy paper. At $18.99 per cartridge for ink (Epson website price, with free overnight shipping if you order at least three cartridges at a time), so far,
- my 8.5" x 11" prints are roughly $1.20 - $1.80 for ink
- my 13" x 19" are about $3.50 - $5.50 for ink
(Printing in "Photo" mode puts your costs at the low end of the ranges. Printing in "Photo RPM" mode costs about 40% - 50% more and puts you at the high end of the price ranges. I usually cannot distinguish between "Photo" and "Photo RPM" modes, so I almost always print in "Photo" mode. Occasionally, I notice banding or tones which do not appear smooth on very close inspection, then I switch to "Photo RPM.")
Warning: I believe ink use varies considerably with paper type. less ink for glossy, more ink for semi-gloss, and still more ink for matte and art paper. I'm not sure though.
I am printing on Inkpress Glossy paper (equivalent in weight, sheen, and brightness to Epson Premium Glossy Photo Paper) which I ordered from B&H Photo. It's less expensive than Epson paper and looks spectacular.
In fact, I recently gave two 8x10's to a friend as a gift. She thought they looked wonderful and was astonished to learn that they were inkjet prints. She thought they must have been "professionally" printed at a lab. I was pretty flattered (credit to the printer, too, of course...) She also happens to be an artist and professional web designer, so she's got a fine eye.
---------------
Update:
I've used the printer some more. I'm still very pleased. However, I've looked closer at the Inkpress paper I mentioned above. From a distance, it looks great, but closer up, it has many problems. Almost every sheet is covered with fine scratches, and about half the sheets have at least one major defect (some as large as 1/8" in diameter) where the gloss coating did not cover the paper. The defects are like little potholes on the surface. At first, I thought I had caused these problems through poor handling. Epson Premium Photo Paper Glossy has an absolutely flawless surface, though, and I have handled the prints the same way. I don't recommend the Inkpress paper.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Epson Stylus Photo 1400 Large Format Photo Printer (C11C655001)

The Epson 1400 takes photo printing to the next level with impressive 13x19 prints at a breakthrough price Auto Photo Correction ensures stunning results every time, while ClariaTM Hi-Definition Ink offers smudge, scratch, water and fade resistant prints. This high-speed printer also includes value-added features like direct CD/DVD printing and Adobe Photoshop Elements.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Epson Stylus Photo 1400 Large Format Photo Printer (C11C655001)

Read More...

Canon Pixma PRO9500MkII Inkjet Photo Printer (3298B002) Review

Canon Pixma PRO9500MkII Inkjet Photo Printer (3298B002)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I have used the Epson R1800 (and the smaller R800) for several years and when it wasn't clogged it printed beautiful prints. The heads finally just clogged up and I was forced to get another printer. I have used other Canon products for decades so biased toward their products. I thought the Canon would be better on the clogging, and I haven't had it long enough to judge that yet. So far I am somewhat disappointed with the printer. There are two limitations so far that are signficant for my use.
I'm more interested in matte papers and fine art papers, and really don't print glossy. Getting used to this printer has been somewhat frustrating. I had been using Epson Presentation Matte and getting really nice prints from a relatively inexpensive paper with good dark blacks and good shadow detail. Duplicating that with Canon has been a challenge. I haven't been able to determine yet if it's the profiles or the printer. My next step is to try custom profiles. I have tried several brands (Ilford, Moab, Harmon) and their suppled profiles and for some of them the blues have a purple cast, and the blacks and shadow detail are muddy. The Canon fine art paper is very nice and matches well with color, good deep blacks and shadow detail(see limitation in next paragraph). So I have yet to find an acceptable photo matte combination.
This printer has a maddening limiation for fine art papers. Canon has decide to disable the ability to print on either end of the paper (requires a 35mm margin on each of the long ends, about 1.3 inches) so you can't even print an 8x10 out of an 8 1/2 x 11 piece of paper. When I called Canon I got a run around and no sensible explanation except the engineers decided to disable the function of the printer and no workarounds. So while the image quality of the Canon fine art rag is very good, it is very expensive to use because of this limitation (which requires you to use a much large piece of paper to get the size print you expect because of all the wasted paper, 13x19 piece of paper to get an 8x10 ). I have since found other reviews mentioning this limitation, and I sure wish I had seen it before purchasing. I don't know if you can fool it with custom profiles.
In general it has required far more work to try to find paper combinations than I ever experienced with Epson where the profiles and papers just seemed to work. I'm still hopeful that I can find the right combination with some customer profiles, but right now the jury is out.


Click Here to see more reviews about: Canon Pixma PRO9500MkII Inkjet Photo Printer (3298B002)

Professional Printing Performance for Large Archival Photos

Buy NowGet 24% OFF

Click here for more information about Canon Pixma PRO9500MkII Inkjet Photo Printer (3298B002)

Read More...