BlueToBits
Getting Fingers Dirty
- Joined
- Aug 2, 2017
- Messages
- 18
- Reaction score
- 11
- Points
- 45
- Location
- UK
- Printer Model
- HP 7500 & 1102W, CTC 3D,
My HP officejet 7500A MFP just keeled over and I need to replace it. My main task is printing A3+ transparency sheets. I am using a special paper and pigment ink will not work. It must be dye ink. I can't seem to find an off the shelf A3 printer that uses dye inks !! the all seem to use pigment inks now. I must be going mad. I'll consider anything... I'm getting desperate!!
Is there an A3 printer out there that will can print using dye inks?
Just for info:
My paper media is the type used to print backlit posters. Often seen as scrolling adverts in bus shelters. It is very tough and tear resistant polyester film. The ink is reverse printed on the coated back side of the transparency which feels like very fine sandpaper. The front side is high gloss. Dye ink fills the roughness in the sandpaper side and I think there's some form of chemical reaction as the ink dries and solidifies. The sandpaper becomes like a semi-flexible translucent diffusing resin. Backlit colours are super vivid and black become opaque. The ink on the sheet becomes waterproof.
Is there an A3 printer out there that will can print using dye inks?
Just for info:
My paper media is the type used to print backlit posters. Often seen as scrolling adverts in bus shelters. It is very tough and tear resistant polyester film. The ink is reverse printed on the coated back side of the transparency which feels like very fine sandpaper. The front side is high gloss. Dye ink fills the roughness in the sandpaper side and I think there's some form of chemical reaction as the ink dries and solidifies. The sandpaper becomes like a semi-flexible translucent diffusing resin. Backlit colours are super vivid and black become opaque. The ink on the sheet becomes waterproof.