We run 2 360's and a 570, and we change rolls a lot, each day, on each printer. We offer a wide variety of print materials, offer a specific turnaround time, and while we try our best to gang up jobs as much as possible, it's not always feasible to run a complete roll start to finish. In fact, we may only print 12-15' on a roll before swapping out for a new material. So I know your pain, and as someone who considers all of our waste, not just from a financial perspective, but from a environmental/landfill perspective, it also sucks to throw away any more than you absolutely need to. P Wagner is right, leaders are definitely a solution, but it takes more than just a few seconds, and unless you align them just right, you may wind up getting some lifting and cause head strikes which wastes material anyway. Obviously some materials are better than others about being able to do this, but if you barely feed the material into the heating chamber on the 560/570, then leave the curing door open, you typically only waste about 6" and I can live with that. One thing that has long irked me about the HP machines is the ambiguity about where the print will start on the page. On my old Roland, I knew within a millimeter where the print would start on every single run and I could change origin on the machine accordingly. On the 570, there is a different leading gap depending on if the roll was just loaded or the printer was recently restarted than if simply prints the next job. Sometimes it's within a few inches of the leading edge and sometimes it's well over a foot, with little explanation (have tried 3 diff RIPs, same result). In almost 4 years of running that machine, there's still a lot that doesn't make sense to me about the thought and design process of material handling and certain components. Roland has been making bulletproof printers for decades and I just wish HP would borrow a few ideas about what a well-built, reliable machine can be instead of a mostly disposable plastic printer. My old XC-540 that was purchased in 2008 is still printing daily at a shop down the street. Most of the printheads are the originals. If you take care of something it should last, but oh well....sorry, looks like I wandered off topic.....