Most everyone is going to tell you whatever they purchased is the best. I don't think anyone will tell you what they purchased is crap or they made a mistake in their purchase decision. While it may be the best for them, it may not be the best for you. Go to the shows and do your research. We went through the same thing before we made our purchase and we ended up with the Epson S40600. I guess you could say we are an Epson shop as we have their wide format Dye Sub Printers as well as their DTG printers, so we felt comfortable with the brand along with the service and support we receive on those printers. We also love their inks. However, that didn't prevent us from looking at Mimaki, HP and Roland. The Mimaki was annoyingly loud while printing, HP didn't have a dealer near us and we felt the Epson had more vibrant print quality when run side by side. We found a dealer at an NBM Show that had HP and Epson running side by side. I don't recall the model number of the HP and he was clearly steering people toward the Epson for whatever reason. As far as Roland, we were not comfortable with the dealer closest to us and felt Roland was falling behind the curve in terms of quality and innovation. One Roland dealer at the show told us they were considering dropping the line in favor of HP due to support issues from Roland and ongoing problems with the new TrueVis printers. You have to take in all this info with a grain of salt. They all make good printers and there is always a reason a dealer that sells multiple lines to steer you toward a particular brand. I have friends with all the brands I mentioned above and they all love them, and they all print well. We chose the S40 printer over other 2 Epson models because we didn't need the extra inksets on the S80600 and felt the added speed wasn't worth the money for the S60600. With the deals Epson had, you could have almost purchased 2 - S40600's for the price of the S60600. We paired that with a Summa S2T160 cutter and are still using our old RS laminator. Printer/Cutter machines are still much slower than a separate printer and cutter and you still have to take off the print to laminate then feed back into the printer to cut it when you could be printing the next job. The Summa S2 T160 is blazingly fast and accurate. The S40 is plenty fast for our shop and while the eco solvent does smell, it's not bad and no one complains. You just get used to it. Epson claims that they are the only eco solvent printer mfg whose inks allow prints to be laminated the same day. The specs state to wait 8 hrs before lamination. We typically wait about 4 hours before we laminate and haven't had any issues. We've also done rush jobs and laminated almost immediately after printing, and I suspect most on this forum have done the same. The 3 heaters on the S40 are independently adjustable in temp and do a great job in the pre heating of the media as well as post curing. You'll have to play around to get the best settings for your particular media. As far as applications, we do wall & floor graphics, vehicle graphics, banners, signs, stickers and POP type materials, basic stuff (we do not do full wraps) and the printer runs most every day for most of the day. Our workload has not exceeded the capacity of the printer at this point. When It does, I will not hesiate to get another. So, right or wrong, that was my take away from doing my research. It may or may not be helpful to you and you may come to a totally different conclusion. My point is input from other shops is only part of the puzzle, go out and to the shows and talk to as many dealers as you can, ask questions and bring your own files to print off. Hope that helps a bit and good luck in your search.