Nozzle
Getting Fingers Dirty
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2016
- Messages
- 30
- Reaction score
- 16
- Points
- 36
- Location
- Australia
- Printer Model
- Epson 9900/9880/9600/3880/3800
Ok, it goes something like this - right now I have a couple of Canon printers with CISSs and dye ink that I use for printing leaflets and other promotional type material for people. I use double sided media that produces photographic quality prints on both sides and I'm very happy with it. The problem is that the dyes that I use (InkTec) don't last long in certain environments. If exposed to direct sunlight my printing will fade withing 4-5 days. Indoor it can last up to a few month. I manly use this process for event advertising, which is a niche and I want to expand my offering.
I've been thinking about producing long lasting advertising cheaply and I can see a few ways of achieving this.
1. To use stable dyes. These are expensive to buy retail, can buy cheaper on eBay/Amazon but supply isn't steady - sometimes they are available, sometimes not. In general, not very economical. Hard to get to the price point i need. Verdict - not really suitable.
2. Use a laser printer. I don't know much about laser printers in term of how cheap they are to run, which models are better, where technology is right now and so on. Here's what I know about laser printers (not sure how much of it applies to the current models). They don't print borderless (unless you go with very big and expensive machines they have in print shops) and borderless is a must for me. Toner is toxic and it is a fine powder that escapes from your printer (especially if you refill. In the past it was typical to get toner deposited all over your printer and around it, not sure if it still applies) and can end up in your lungs and be a contributing factor to different health problems including cancer. For this reason I've been using solid ink printers for laser like printing, but they also don't print borderless, so I'm limited in what I can use them for. Plus the dots are more visible than with my inkjet printing. I think all laser printers produce more coarse offset type finish? Unless there's a laser printer out there that's inexpensive and can print borderless, this option is also dead.
3. The last option and the one I have done a LOT of research about lately - printing with pigment. I mean I've been printing with pigment for 15 years now, I'm talking printing for particular segment - advertising, not photography. The advantage of pigment is that it's available quite cheaply and supply is steady (unlike stable dyes). Disadvantage is that you need RC paper to print on it and it's relatively expensive (though I've found some that quite cheap). Printer has to be quick (read have many nozzles), handle pigment well, do borderless and be inexpensive to buy (so if it breaks it would be inexpensive to replace). It also needs to be a CMYK printer (light inks are used much more but cost the same, which affects the cost of printing). Unfortunately, and it's a bummer, there are very few printers that are in this category.
a. The very nice and promising Epson WF 4xxx and 5xxx ranges with big cartridges that have internal CISS looked so sweet and almost like a bingo, until I discovered they don't do borderless. They got disregarded together with Canon Maxify range for this reason.
b. Canon IX7000. A possible candidate. Disadvantage - huge, harder to get inks for, quirky.
c. Epson WF 3620/3640 printers. This is what I settled for for now. 800 black nozzles and 256 nozzles for each color. On paper should be a killer machine. In practice it's quick, but Epson Expression Premium series, that has fewer nozzles destroys it in photo printing speed. Anyone knows why? Original Durabrite Ultra black is very matte (no wonder - printer is optimized for office printing) for this reason when you choose glossy surfaces in the driver it only prints CMY, which produces hardly any gloss differential, but black is low Dmax. By choosing matte paper you make the printer print in CMYK, but black is very matte, gloss differential is horrible. My idea is to replace matte black with gloss black and print with matte paper selection in driver. This seems to be the best idea so far. Printers are cheap. Unfortunately, cartridges are quite small - color 15ml, black 50ml - that's what they take, how much the chip allows to use - another story, the chinese are mum on this point. Another point to worry about - PrecisionCore heads. From experience I know they are super sensitive to the quality of ink, almost like Canon heads.
d. This is a crazy idea I've been having all this time. Epson Expression Premium XP-720/820 on pigment. Has this been done? has anyone tried this? My gut feeling it won't work. These stupid new cartridges with felt will probably block pigment and eventually restrict ink flow. Plus tiny 1.5pl nozzles (above mentioned WF 3620 has 2.8 pl nozzles) sounds like a recipe for disaster. What's attractive about these printers is that they are quick.
e. The last possible idea I have (and the most crazy) is to get one of the older Epson pro printers (2400/2880/1800/1900/2000 and so on) and run it in CMYKCMYK mode. This will be a super quick machine. Heads will handle pigment just fine - these are different heads from all these cheapish printers. Disadvantage is obvious - I will need a rip to do that. I've heard wasatch supports some of these.
So, what do you experienced people think of any of my ideas above? Have I missed anything? Am I wrong about something? I would appreciate any input, sharing ideas or just bouncing them around. Especially if anyone can answer questions in 3d - at this point I'm trying to decide between 3c and 3d. 3e is more of a long term thing because of it technical complexity.
Thanks a lot.
I've been thinking about producing long lasting advertising cheaply and I can see a few ways of achieving this.
1. To use stable dyes. These are expensive to buy retail, can buy cheaper on eBay/Amazon but supply isn't steady - sometimes they are available, sometimes not. In general, not very economical. Hard to get to the price point i need. Verdict - not really suitable.
2. Use a laser printer. I don't know much about laser printers in term of how cheap they are to run, which models are better, where technology is right now and so on. Here's what I know about laser printers (not sure how much of it applies to the current models). They don't print borderless (unless you go with very big and expensive machines they have in print shops) and borderless is a must for me. Toner is toxic and it is a fine powder that escapes from your printer (especially if you refill. In the past it was typical to get toner deposited all over your printer and around it, not sure if it still applies) and can end up in your lungs and be a contributing factor to different health problems including cancer. For this reason I've been using solid ink printers for laser like printing, but they also don't print borderless, so I'm limited in what I can use them for. Plus the dots are more visible than with my inkjet printing. I think all laser printers produce more coarse offset type finish? Unless there's a laser printer out there that's inexpensive and can print borderless, this option is also dead.
3. The last option and the one I have done a LOT of research about lately - printing with pigment. I mean I've been printing with pigment for 15 years now, I'm talking printing for particular segment - advertising, not photography. The advantage of pigment is that it's available quite cheaply and supply is steady (unlike stable dyes). Disadvantage is that you need RC paper to print on it and it's relatively expensive (though I've found some that quite cheap). Printer has to be quick (read have many nozzles), handle pigment well, do borderless and be inexpensive to buy (so if it breaks it would be inexpensive to replace). It also needs to be a CMYK printer (light inks are used much more but cost the same, which affects the cost of printing). Unfortunately, and it's a bummer, there are very few printers that are in this category.
a. The very nice and promising Epson WF 4xxx and 5xxx ranges with big cartridges that have internal CISS looked so sweet and almost like a bingo, until I discovered they don't do borderless. They got disregarded together with Canon Maxify range for this reason.
b. Canon IX7000. A possible candidate. Disadvantage - huge, harder to get inks for, quirky.
c. Epson WF 3620/3640 printers. This is what I settled for for now. 800 black nozzles and 256 nozzles for each color. On paper should be a killer machine. In practice it's quick, but Epson Expression Premium series, that has fewer nozzles destroys it in photo printing speed. Anyone knows why? Original Durabrite Ultra black is very matte (no wonder - printer is optimized for office printing) for this reason when you choose glossy surfaces in the driver it only prints CMY, which produces hardly any gloss differential, but black is low Dmax. By choosing matte paper you make the printer print in CMYK, but black is very matte, gloss differential is horrible. My idea is to replace matte black with gloss black and print with matte paper selection in driver. This seems to be the best idea so far. Printers are cheap. Unfortunately, cartridges are quite small - color 15ml, black 50ml - that's what they take, how much the chip allows to use - another story, the chinese are mum on this point. Another point to worry about - PrecisionCore heads. From experience I know they are super sensitive to the quality of ink, almost like Canon heads.
d. This is a crazy idea I've been having all this time. Epson Expression Premium XP-720/820 on pigment. Has this been done? has anyone tried this? My gut feeling it won't work. These stupid new cartridges with felt will probably block pigment and eventually restrict ink flow. Plus tiny 1.5pl nozzles (above mentioned WF 3620 has 2.8 pl nozzles) sounds like a recipe for disaster. What's attractive about these printers is that they are quick.
e. The last possible idea I have (and the most crazy) is to get one of the older Epson pro printers (2400/2880/1800/1900/2000 and so on) and run it in CMYKCMYK mode. This will be a super quick machine. Heads will handle pigment just fine - these are different heads from all these cheapish printers. Disadvantage is obvious - I will need a rip to do that. I've heard wasatch supports some of these.
So, what do you experienced people think of any of my ideas above? Have I missed anything? Am I wrong about something? I would appreciate any input, sharing ideas or just bouncing them around. Especially if anyone can answer questions in 3d - at this point I'm trying to decide between 3c and 3d. 3e is more of a long term thing because of it technical complexity.
Thanks a lot.
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