I have order a CJV30-160, and it will be installed next week. I will write my first impressions, thanks to all!
Good choice! I will say I would have recommended a separate printer and cutter, an all-in-one machine could be a pretty big bottleneck in a high-production workflow, I know it would kill us. But you made an excellent decision, it's a very good machine.
"Insignia, just curious. What is the difference in ink cost GS6000 vs. JV-33? Also what material have you had problems with as far as extra heavy?"
I estimate it to be about twice as much. The GS6000 goes through a LOT of ink when it self-cleans. I've been told multiple times you can reduce the number of cleanings significantly, but as-is, the green has already killed one print head in 6 months, so I'm not taking the chance with fewer cleanings. Also, the JV33 is 4-color, the GS6000 is 8, and while it doesn't use a significant amount of lc, lm, orange and green, it still uses them and they still cost money.
As far as heavy material, we bought the thing specifically to print wallpaper material, we print a large amount of custom wallpaper using Korographics material. It absolutely will not run through the printer. The same for just about any banner material. Epson has been in a couple times to investigate and they always say "it's the material", to which I say BS, I remove it from the Epson, put it directly in the Mimaki and it prints flawlessly. This is the same for Korographics, Ultraflexx Wallscapes, Ultraflexx 13oz banner, Bantex 18oz banner, and a half dozen other "thick" materials. Literally nothing prints right, either it skews, doesn't pull at all, or warps, causing head strikes.
What Epson doesn't tell you when you buy the printer, is the only material they "approve" for printing through the GS6000 is their photo paper, their canvas and 3M IJ180. If you have problems running ANYTHING else, they will wash their hands of it and tell you it's "not approved media, this printer is not designed to run this". Seriously. That's their answer, I've heard it a dozen times from them now. I know others are able to run heavy stock through their machine with no problems, and that's great, but there are a lot of people who cant. The machine is not consistently manufactured, some work right, others don't, it's a tossup which one you'll get, and if you get a bad one, there is literally nothing they will do to help, they have excuses for everything that goes wrong, they trace it all back to media.