How about the ink cost differential?Not impressed with the Canon all the hype of printing 1000+ sqft an hour and the Canon tech himself can't keep it dialed in to run that fast. Your going to get about 350 to 400sqft printing speed on banner and slower on other materials. Having 2 800 or adding a epson 80600l is what I would recomend. You have the capability to run to different jobs at once and if one goes down your still printing not stuck in the mud waiting for Canon tech. 2 hp 800 are faster then Canon for less money. And epson is by far higher quality then the hp or the Canon. When we sell product from all three everyone that buys loves epson and hp over Canon on quality of the print. Canon is only running banner at this time other wise it just set there. And both epson and hp do banner just as well or better than the Canon. You could always have hp or epson make you on a deal for 3to4 printers since they are close to cost on the Canon once the epson or hp make that deal.
ink use/cost on colorado is low and the savings will pay for the machine if printing a lotHow about the ink cost differential?
I'm happy printing wallpaper at 600sq ft per hr, perfect panel length and color consistency. All I see is panel length and color consistency complaints from latex users trying to print wallpaper. Ive had 0 downtime in a year/400k sq/ft of using the Colorado.OK. I won't argue with you. Buy what you think is best for you.
But if speed is so important to you, buy three latex printers and you're done. You will always have at least one working. I hope .
Hi Shariff.
I don't think you should bother about the ph, especially if you are buying a new machine. This thing is build to last. I believe that when the time for ph replacement comes they will have paid off. One thing you should consider is that every time you put fresh ink in the machine it takes its date of expire plus the one of the ink you have in the system and calculates another one that differs from what you have on the ink label. My advice is not to overstock with ink because you might end up with ink containters which you can't use.
I am operating with both, Latex 800W and Colorado 1650, for a bit over 2 years and I am facing the machines' differences on a daily basis. I would describe the HP's build quality as mediocre. But it works...somehow. The 1650, on the other hand, might easily outlive this and probably the next two Latex generations . From my experience so far there are two things where the 1650 fails compared to the Latex 800. 1. It can't print good black. By good black I mean dark, dense, pitch black. 2. The ink is supposed to withstand 80% strech but it can't. It cracks. However it is amazing how much it does sterch for a UV ink. So unless you print a lot of car wrap vinyls, as we do, you should not worry about No2.
Regarding the mismatch you talk about, you will not have that problem with the 1650. When we talk about large prints splitted in several places the size match is astonishing. Also not to forget - no color distortions thanks to the stable environment under the hood.
So, for wallprints, I think, the 1650 would be a very good choise.
FYI we primially use type 2 fabric back wallcovering,Hi Shariff.
I don't think you should bother about the ph, especially if you are buying a new machine. This thing is build to last. I believe that when the time for ph replacement comes they will have paid off. One thing you should consider is that every time you put fresh ink in the machine it takes its date of expire plus the one of the ink you have in the system and calculates another one that differs from what you have on the ink label. My advice is not to overstock with ink because you might end up with ink containters which you can't use.
I am operating with both, Latex 800W and Colorado 1650, for a bit over 2 years and I am facing the machines' differences on a daily basis. I would describe the HP's build quality as mediocre. But it works...somehow. The 1650, on the other hand, might easily outlive this and probably the next two Latex generations . From my experience so far there are two things where the 1650 fails compared to the Latex 800. 1. It can't print good black. By good black I mean dark, dense, pitch black. 2. The ink is supposed to withstand 80% strech but it can't. It cracks. However it is amazing how much it does sterch for a UV ink. So unless you print a lot of car wrap vinyls, as we do, you should not worry about No2.
Regarding the mismatch you talk about, you will not have that problem with the 1650. When we talk about large prints splitted in several places the size match is astonishing. Also not to forget - no color distortions thanks to the stable environment under the hood.
So, for wallprints, I think, the 1650 would be a very good choise.
We have spoken to Canon about our concerns, and we are using HP wallpaper profiles.Those are 2 complaints I don't think I've heard before. Have you spoken to Canon about your concerns? Are you running custom profiles?
Yup. That was discussed with Canon. This I have to underline: Canon have impressive customer service. But unfortunately, regarding both issues that is the reality.Those are 2 complaints I don't think I've heard before. Have you spoken to Canon about your concerns? Are you running custom profiles?
I would say that this depends a lot on the print speed and, generaly said, any media crash, no matter what the print media is, can potentially damage the ph. But this question is a bit like how bad you will be injured if a car hits you when you cross the street. And whatever answer you get you will still cross the streetswe also have another concern, as we using a very similar media with these specfication (20 oz. (457g/m2) Type II), if there is a media crash will the ph get damaged.