L260 is a great machine. Gen2 Latex ink isn't as durable as the Gen3 on the 300 and 500 series latex, but you can print some substrates on the 260 over the others. Like clay coated paper for posters.
Eco solvent is also a great option. Pros and Cons to each.
Which RIP do you intend using?
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I have a Designjet Z6200 that I use for renders of set and special effect designs for the entertainment industry. It has always been reliable. I know 2 different beasts entirely but again, always reliable. Thanks for the input.We still have a 25500 that prints perfectly solely for printing posters on cheap uncoated paper.
The L260 is the next generation but basically the same tech.
300 series came next with faster speeds, optimizer etc.
I have a Designjet Z6200 that I use for renders of set and special effect designs for the entertainment industry. It has always been reliable. I know 2 different beasts entirely but again, always reliable. Thanks for the input.
I didn't realize that although looking at them they look the same except the heaters. One thing Im concerned with is the fact that as we start this venture up, we wont print on it daily at first and will that have any effect on the heads, ink, etc.while it sits.Actually the z6200 is the forebearer of the entire HP latex line.. they added heaters to the z6200 and bam - latex printer. HP bought back the entire national stock of z6200's from dealers to prevent folks from trying to convert them to latex (per my repro dealer).
Actually the z6200 is the forebearer of the entire HP latex line.. they added heaters to the z6200 and bam - latex printer. HP bought back the entire national stock of z6200's from dealers to prevent folks from trying to convert them to latex (per my repro dealer).
HP is the Phisher Price of printers, great to get your feet wet with and easy to learn. When you replace it you should get a non-disposable non plastic printer, imo.
I find HP's obsession with consumable parts annoying and time consuming from the view of a production manager and have had very serious supply issues even on their more industrial machines like their flat beds (I have to wait several months for an encoder strip!!) - not to mention how much ink is wasted when the ink chip card expire. Dealing with the LX850 was a perfect illustration of how HP tends to over engineer the simple process of setting a printer up and getting it to run files, again wasting more time. I will say this though; HP has excellent documentation and helpful resources online, but not so much for their lower end plastic printers.It's funny that people refuse to believe in the HP printers. Honestly, the only decent argument against HP printers is the lack of control over every single aspect of how it prints. It's great that you want to have control of your printer, but no one else cares if you do or not. Don't be ignorant guys. We went with HP for three main reasons, zero daily, weekly, or monthly maintenance, consumable print heads, and fastest time to a finished product. Of course, NOW there are few more options that come close to that, but not close in price.
If Phisher Price made toy appliances this great then I'd have them furnish my whole house.
As I said, Ive had the z6200 for along time. Have ripped it apart, put it back together, etc. I find its easy to work on and the documentation is good. But again chip thing with the ink is ridiculous. We were also looking at a Roland VS-540i as well. Wife and I are headed out to the ISA show next month so hoping to get some good information there as well.