southernink
New Member
Does any one have experience/reviews with the HP Latex 315? I am currently using a Roland SP-540v and it just seems the HP would speed up productivity. Thank you in advance.
So obviously they have a lot of issues. Thank you for the help.
So obviously they have a lot of issues. Thank you for the help.
I'm not writing it off. I was just basing my reply to the link I was given, which was nothing but issues. I understand there's going to be issues with anything, I use a Roland, so I know about issues. HA HA HA! I'm just trying to find out the pros and cons.I mean thats a little hasty to say. Every printer can have issues. Theyve been solid workhorses for me for quite a while. I wouldnt immediately write them off.
Trust me, I don't have to research Roland given I use them. My issue right now is the Roland is so slow. I have an order for 12 4x8 banners and it will take 1 1/2 - 2 days just to print them. And then there's the degassing that has to happen which is more time. I'm just trying to find a more productive and efficient alternative.You determined this because there are a lot of threads about them? Wouldn't want to search Roland printers then either I guess.................
Regarding the latex printers, like anything else there are people that swear by them and then there are people that won't touch them. From what I've seen it all depends how you intend to use it and what your expectations are.
I'm not writing it off. I was just basing my reply to the link I was given, which was nothing but issues. I understand there's going to be issues with anything, I use a Roland, so I know about issues. HA HA HA! I'm just trying to find out the pros and cons.
Thank you for the input. The info really helps in deciding what our next step is.Pro's
Good print quality. Proper profile and passes look great up-close or far away.
Good speeds. It's not flatbed or 120+" roll-to-roll fast for sure as it's about a 1/10 of the price (used large format) and limited to 63" media for banners.
Easy to profile. By far one of my favorite features of this printer. Don't even care that it will eat up about 10 or so of media to profile it for new media types.
Print roll-to-roll and walk away. Then come back to a well tracked roll and load a new roll.
Works great with Caldera.
No fumes, no smell... far better than solvent or uv inks when displaying indoors. Many regulations are in place now that prevents solvent and uv from being in hospitals, schools, etc...
Con's
I don't like to load them as I had Roland's for years. But the tracking on it makes me quickly forget about having to feed it from the front. So, let's consider this a 1/2 con.
De-lamination Issues. There are some issues here and will need to see improvement to rebuild the 100% trust for the process in future models. We have not had a horror story as of yet, but I've seen it come off of printed calendared and cast vinyl a bit to easy. Which leads to concerns and has us testing the prints more before they leave. We use s cold laminator w/ no heat assist. Perhaps that is part of the problem? I don't yet...
It's not a printer that will last 10+ years. It's built and priced for a cycle of 5-8 years by my projections. But when you can pick them up new in the 15k range at times and used for less than 10k, let's be real on how long it should last. Quality build with modern tech, but I would never think it would last 10+ years for sure. Another 1/2 con as it's priced about where it should be for a mid range printer in terms of years.
Even with issues... HP over all other small roll-to-roll for our company going forward. No printer is perfect and they all have been built for us to decide what is best for us in terms of production solutions for our primary product lines. HP is best for us right now and another latex version rises above them.
I'm not writing it off. I was just basing my reply to the link I was given, which was nothing but issues. I understand there's going to be issues with anything, I use a Roland, so I know about issues. HA HA HA! I'm just trying to find out the pros and cons.
You are probably correct on the gamut for LcLm vs regular CMYK, I haven't done my homework on that. But my point still stands that a regular CMYK Epson can achieve an excellent gamut and you can save money by not using the LcLm, regardless of gamut.CMYKLcLm has nothing to do with increasing gamut in fact one could argue that it decreases gamut.
Like you I keep an eye on the Epson but fade resistance issue seem to crop up with them.
Not 100% true, Epson has always had an issue with Yellow fading significantly faster than other colors. From my research, it may still be an issue to some extent for some users.You are probably correct on the gamut for LcLm vs regular CMYK, I haven't done my homework on that. But my point still stands that a regular CMYK Epson can achieve an excellent gamut and you can save money by not using the LcLm, regardless of gamut.
As far as fading....from my understanding the fading issue is only present in the specialty inks other than the regular CMYK such as the orange, red, metallic, LK, white, or clear ink sets. Those are where the fading issues are present but those inks are only available in the S60 and S80 and I wouldn't want those specialty inks anyway I would just go with dual CMYK on the S60 or stick with the S40. Again I've never owned one but from what I'm hearing the regular CMYK don't have fading issues.