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I've had my new printer for a week and a bit and I've gone from hating them to falling in love with this one, it's a Brother brand, a DCP-J315W, it costs around 70€ and it's wifi, I don't know about other models but I've tried other brands, both laser and inkjet, and this is definitely the one I like the most, very easy connection, easy to change cartridges, the software it comes with is great, mobile app and it works perfectly, the ink is cheap, the compatible one has 3 sets to change 3 times for 20€.
Just for the software and how well it works, I'm sticking with this brand for now, the use I make of it is just printing documents and I don't need much at home. -
I am very pro HP, especially in inkjet, without a doubt, in laser it is another story. And I am also very happy with the wifi and that's because it was a gift, otherwise I would not have bought it with wifi, but it is extremely easy to print from the ipad, you don't even need software, just press the button and print.
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Well, I've had 3 HP inkjet printers and I hate all of them, I thought the cartridges were very expensive and the software was rubbish, and the ones I had weren't exactly cheap, I had an Epson that was cheap and worked well but broke down too soon, I used a Samsung laser printer at work and it works really well and the software is pretty good, although I hate Samsung's customer service.
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well, in laser, the one I used the most was the one I gave in BN and color was the OKI, we used it to advertise the store
it had the ink separate from the drum and one day it stopped working and we reset the drum (toner) counter
and to keep going,regards
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And since I'm a stickler, I'm going to explain why you shouldn't use clone or refillable cartridges in our printers. The same goes for lasers, unless we get the same type of toner (which there are) from the machine manufacturer. Mind you, with a machine that costs €30, I couldn't care less, but there are machines that Epson is currently releasing where the cartridge costs €50 and lasts for 2000 pages, and they don't do too badly. Explanation: The inks that are normally used are pigmented inks, which are inks that use a powder to give color to the base. I say normally, because they are usually the ones used in Epson and HP. The other type are usually dye-based inks, which are transparent. A brand that I know uses or used dye-based inks is Brother. These have the added problem that, since they don't use pigments, clone inks tend to be more liquid than the originals, soaking the sponges that collect ink from the cleanings. They have less definition, and you can tell because the ink spreads out along the sides of the letters, giving very little definition. That's why dye-based inks don't give photo quality. If they sold you the machine with dye-based inks and told you that you could print photos, they lied to you. Both are water-based, but they need solvents to fix the ink, in addition to resins and other chemicals. That's why they're used domestically. The same goes for lasers, refilling them with toner that isn't the one for the machine. It ends up filling the machine inside with toner, and since toner is powder, it eats up the gears and other moving parts of the machines. But that's where you can find OKI toner with the chips to refill them, which are the machines I've used the most for graphic printing. And this is my toy: Epson SureColor SC-S30600 - Epson I almost forgot. To unclog the printheads, you shouldn't inject the cleaning solvent, but rather use a syringe with a silicone tube to suck up the ink that the printhead has inside. This way, we don't clog the pigment further, which is what usually happens with excessive cleanings or when injecting solvent into the printhead. -
It's just that the issue isn't very mysterious. As Garfield says and was noted earlier, Epsons usually die from being left idle for too long, regardless of whether you use original or alien cartridges. And not because they can't be fixed, but because in most cases, these are machines that cost less new than sending them in for repair. With HP there isn't that problem, if it happens to you, you change the cartridges and everything is fine.
(By the way, the first thing that goes wrong with Brother machines is the fuser.)
If you've had good luck with it, send it in for repair, if not, it's not worth it.
Listen to Cobito and get a printer that suits your needs, and if it's going to be idle for a long time between uses, maybe you should look at other options. -
well, unless you resort to using a "payphone" ;D
best regards and thanks -
Man, if it's not in color, you can buy a black laser like a Samsung that I've seen for 60€ and with a toner of 2000 pages. What I would look at before getting any machine is the cost of consumables. A 50€ machine is no good if the toner costs 60€, because even if you think you can get another new one for that money, those toners that come with the machine are courtesy, so they have half the pages of a new one. And they are also coming out with high capacity toners and in places where the toner for that machine is sold and the chips to make the toner full. -
that is the problem I print sporadically both in BN and in color in BN some text (very little) and in color some Auto Cad parts (and I like the dimensions in red) and some map of Pyrenees topography / very few also I rarely use GPS
greetings -
Don't complicate your life.
Retire the Seiko, get a decent mid-range laser printer, for BN they are the best in terms of quality/price per page and you can leave it parked for months without any problem if you take care to buy a dust cover for it.
For photos and color work, a USB stick. Almost all copy shops can help you out with that, so you don't have to keep a machine that you only use occasionally.