kdsdata
Printer Guru
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2017
- Messages
- 161
- Reaction score
- 144
- Points
- 148
- Location
- Calgary, AB Canada
- Printer Model
- Pro-100 & Brother-L8900
I can only add regarding the Pro-100. For heavy card stock is see some difficulty, because there is no true "rear" tray, as in "straight through", like my i9900 had. However I have printed much on photo quality paper without difficulty, or without any paper crinkle of envelopes.
If you are planning on folding your own sleeves, I see the cracking from folding more of an issue. However, and this is a BIG one for me. The paper handling is what I love about the Pro-100. Canon simply has this function hands down. Regardless of paper or weight, it is always snappy, always straight, and I do not remember ever of a double feed. The tray is easy to load, and when you have to abort a print job, it is click and the printer stops at that point and ejects the job. Now that is nice. No assumption, like a lot of lasers, that you "probably want" the rest of the page printed, or heaven forbid like my old Lexmark, that actually forced the job to the last page before it quit. I actually had to resort to a power down on large jobs. argch!
The other issue is printing on the CD. The Pro-100 does a very nice job, however it's not the fastest. It would be worth your testing (quality is no issue), but try low density areas to make sure that the speed per CD is not a disappointment for you. Of course the fact that you don't have to fiddle with stick on labels may make up for that, as well as considering that labels seem to be expensive, and a source of trouble if not centered perfectly.
You are wondering why sleeves are not as available as once, and/or expensive. I suppose that is because of lower demand. "Way" less people play CDs anymore. It's all about downloading from iTunes, another argch!, but admittedly easier for mobile listening.
Good luck with your project, or should I say projects.
If you are planning on folding your own sleeves, I see the cracking from folding more of an issue. However, and this is a BIG one for me. The paper handling is what I love about the Pro-100. Canon simply has this function hands down. Regardless of paper or weight, it is always snappy, always straight, and I do not remember ever of a double feed. The tray is easy to load, and when you have to abort a print job, it is click and the printer stops at that point and ejects the job. Now that is nice. No assumption, like a lot of lasers, that you "probably want" the rest of the page printed, or heaven forbid like my old Lexmark, that actually forced the job to the last page before it quit. I actually had to resort to a power down on large jobs. argch!
The other issue is printing on the CD. The Pro-100 does a very nice job, however it's not the fastest. It would be worth your testing (quality is no issue), but try low density areas to make sure that the speed per CD is not a disappointment for you. Of course the fact that you don't have to fiddle with stick on labels may make up for that, as well as considering that labels seem to be expensive, and a source of trouble if not centered perfectly.
You are wondering why sleeves are not as available as once, and/or expensive. I suppose that is because of lower demand. "Way" less people play CDs anymore. It's all about downloading from iTunes, another argch!, but admittedly easier for mobile listening.
Good luck with your project, or should I say projects.