Update: the Epson engineer just left. Aside from the fact that our printer has had more breakdowns than a typical machine, I'm feeling better about it this morning. He went over the frame with a fine toothed comb and determined the root of all of our media feeding issues is because the frame was so far out of alignment. He worked it back so it's perfectly in alignment with the printer chassis, dialed it in, and we were able to run a full roll of wallpaper material with no problems at all. Before this, we couldn't print 5' without getting significant head strikes, the media would buckle and warp terribly bad, even with the heaters turned completely off. In fact, with this 90' roll of material, we actually cranked the heat all the way up to 50/50/50 and it printed flawlessly, the media stayed perfectly flat across the platen, and it rolled perfectly square on the takeup. In one year we've literally never been able to do this with any media, let alone wallpaper, which is about the most finicky material I've ever seen to print.
He looked over the rest of the printer and said it seems to be in perfect condition. He admitted that some of the breakdowns we've seen were because some of the earlier machines had some sub-par components that Epson has been replacing as they've failed (including a head failure due to poor-quality green ink, carriage motor, carriage pulleys, and a few sensors). He said Epson will continue to replace components for free even outside of warranty if they are parts that shouldn't fail. I'm not sure if that makes me feel warm and fuzzy, I wish they wouldn't have released a machine with issues in the first place, but it is what it is, and I can't say Epson hasn't always been helpful and attentive when we've had problems.
Right now it looks like we need to point the blame for the trouble at our dealer. They assembled the machine. They're also who I've complained to dozens of times over the last year about the problems we've been having, and they've always failed to elevate our concerns to the proper people at Epson until now. It's extremely frustrating that it took a year of complaining to get them to send someone out to correct their sloppy assembly when this is something that should have been fixed a long time ago. So that's a fight I've got to take up now, but I don't expect much outcome from it. I will be switching vendors for much of our ink and media, so they do stand to lose a good chunk of business because of their lack of service.
What are your thoughts on the new feed system added on to the back of the machine. We have not requested that one be added to our printer since we have had little issues, but I would like to have it installed if it helps. Do you find that you can add more heat with the new feed?
We have 2 GS6000's and 2 jv33's. Both are awesome printers. JV33 is more of a Man's machine, like a tank. Messy, works, gets the job done.
GS6000's are more like women. Look Beautiful, print beautiful but are slightly more cranky.
They are cheap. So they get bought. It's only after the fact that the people realize it's too late. I know a friend of mine who wanted a Roland but his boss was too cheap and bought the Epson on price..They swapped the machine out 3 times in 1 year because of problems.
And with the HP, if a red flag doesnt go up that you can get a $26,000 printer for $14,000 then you'll learn the hard way..
Love when a real life story has a good ending, glad to hear it's working now.
Epson makes good printers, and now you found out what the true problem was, NOT the actual printer, but the sloppy install of the frame which was done by the dealer, not Epson.
So, this brings up the question, who is liable for all the lost time, lost production, & lost profit potential you have incurred over the last year?
In my book, it's the DEALER, and they should be sued for the lost revenue in small claims court.
And if you don't want to take legal action against them because their negligence caused the problems, at least I would NEVER EVER use them again for anything again.
I remember going to a company quality seminar years ago, and the keynote speaker said the lack of Quality in America is largely based on the fact that we except the crap that we our sold. And the main message, is that you get what you accept, so STOP accepting low quality and demand that vendors and dealers provide high quality.
One way to do that is NOT to support those companies and dealers that don't maintain high quality standards.
I'm just appalled that your dealer made his commission and profit on the sale and install of the GS6000, however for the last year you have LOST money with this printer because they did NOT set it up correctly to factory specifications.
Don't reward this dealer any longer...