Thanks for the feedback. I provided the dealer with samples of what I was going to be printing, the size, and the material I wanted to use......and this was the machine he recommended. As far as 6, 7, and 8 color printers go, do you mean an Aqueous printer or is there an eco-solvent option? I'm still learning..
I understand that you wish someone points out specific printer. But it depends on several factors and which one you prefer from others.
If you go for an aqueous printer then it gives high quality prints, but you have to laminate prints on SAV and need separate cutter with optical sensor. The most aqueous printers nowadays use aqueous pigmented ink. It's scratch prone on SAV, because this ink is not designed for vynil, a thin layer of coating holds the ink. I have no idea how many vendors in your area sell SAV for aqueous inks. Media for pigmented ink and dye ink are different, so the media which you use on your Epson may not work on pigmented ink. If those are OK for you, next is the models. This is the choice between Canon, Epson and HP. Up to 44" Canon and Epson give best color gamut, Canon is the fastest but HP is the most reliable and economical. You'll get around 50 sqf/h speed. I'm holding HP Z5200 for now.
If you need over 100 sqf/h, above 44" width, then only choice is HP Z6XXX series.
You may look at A3 color laser printers too, if you print only 2-3" stickers. KM, Canon, Oki.
Where I live, everything is cheap, these small stickers from 300+ sheets of A4 usually done by offset.
If these are not suitable for you then eco-sol and thermal. Both have print/cut solution. Thermal is choice of Gerber and Summa DC. No lamination, get sharp, bold prints but not cost effective, not good for photo images. I had thermal Roland PC600 a long time ago.
The Roland and Mimaki printers I had, were very nice in the beginning, easy to work with. After a year or so, start to drop out. No error codes, no warning. Wasting too much ink for cleaning. Then the headache begun starting with replacing dampers, then captop, wiper, pump and end up replacing the printhead. Ouch! 2000 bucks for head alone.
Some people saying Roland is good, x amount of years without a problem. Not all Roland models are the same. SJ, SP, VP, XJ, XC, RS those are with DX4 heads -good, VS, RE, BN, XR, XF, XF, EJ with DX7 -so so, and VG, SG with Ricoh head -not clear yet.
Now I'm going to get L360, but in China it costs about 35000USD the nearest place I can get while Roland and Mimaki printers about 10000-20000 USD over there. Chinese guys are cheap, I'm not saying that Russell Peters said. The most of chinese count on every single cents, even though they buy latex dispite the crazy price.
Also not all HP latex is the same. Look only a model with OMAS "Optical media advance sensor" something like that. 110, 310 330 no OMAS.
In the end, the lessons I have learned:
1. I won't buy any printer with multichannel printhead. Couple of nozzles clogged, forced to dump a lot of ink. Very expensive to replace printhead, self replacement voids the warranty (exept Canon) difficult to troubleshoot.
2. Don't pay too much attention on picoliters. It's better to have 50x magnifying loop and see the prints. I misleaded by Epson head's 4 picoliter spec. It is the smallest droplet size, which achievable only on highest settings. They should mention the biggest droplet size also which is 40 something. You will get x,2x,4x dropsizes anywhere between the smallest and the biggest. When I print some drawings on Epson stylus pro 9900 in fast mode the lines and small letters were not perfect as my HP5500 which has 12 picoliter droplets.
3. Always see the printer in action and make test print own file before purchase.
All those things automatically lead me to HP. HP's not easy in the beginning, specially media load and profiling. After few days or weeks you will be familiar with it.
I'm not convincing you, maybe I'm wrong. This is just my little limited experience over 15 years in the nomadic land (end of my work today, outside temp- 13F below 0 right now). If it helps someone I will be happy, if not just ignore it.