Great point! Thank youWhich machine has better service in your area? Both machines are comparable, but when they break you will wish you bought the one with the service tech 1 hour away vs. 4 days away
Thank you...because the factory salesman keeps saying Mimaki is way better quality. And when I ask why, they do not know.I have been trying to decide between the two as well. I had samples printed on both, on the first batch, Epson blew the mimaki away holding fine detail on small decals. Color was spot on to my files in illustrator. The mimaki samples looked bad, grainy and colors were off but this was apparently due to cheap vinyl and a lower pass print. Mimaki ran another batch and they were nice and sharp, but colors were still off, a little too heavy on the magenta. Overalll feeling more confident in the Epson and the pre sale support has been better and quicker.
Epson, without a doubt. Newer tech, best quality solvent on the market. Mimaki is slow and old.
Mimaki is slow and old...based on? Best solvent tech? Based on what? Their sales brochure?
Homework: 7 page minimum paper with fact based evidence based on primary sources. Citations in Chicago Manual of Style.
What tech is new? Which Epson were you comparing speeds to also? The quality we get out of ours is great even at low res 6 pt is perfectly legible. Sounds like they didn't have it dialed in right or something then. The Epson's get a lot of praise but they're fairly new so it's going to be talked about more. Using anecdotal evidence from here, neither of these printers seem to have problems.Epson, without a doubt. Newer tech, best quality solvent on the market. Mimaki is slow and old.
Should I purchase a Mimaki jv150-160 or Epson S40600. Both single head 64 inch...do not need cutter on machine.
1. Ink costs?
2. Longevity?
3. Print Quality
Thank you very much!
Just to clear some things up, Epson obviously has new tech because Epson developed the latest head technology and doesn't license it to Mimaki yet. So yes, Mimaki is one generation back compared to the Epson. That being said, a properly calibrated modern printer should print beautifully and fast. I see a lot of people comparing machine quality but they are all, for the most part, printing the same resolution. When you see a low quality print that doesn't print colors correctly, it is always because it wasn't aligned properly and the color profile was a boxed one. A properly calibrated Mimaki can make the exact same print an Epson can except the Epson will be faster due to the latest head tech. If the slight speed difference is important to you then get the Epson but, as stated above, if you can get a Mimaki tech out in a day rather than an Epson tech in 3 days, it's worth getting the Mimaki.
Only had our s80600 for a week now, coming from a roland xj540. To say that because 2 machines print the same resolution that they can print the same quality and color output is just wrong. First off these machines have different inks and number of ink colors. They also have different droplet size and patterns. And many other variables.
9 years of running the xj540 (a great machine IMO) it could never produce what this new epson does. With the epson (so far) Zero banding, awesome colors, super crisp. And all with boxed profiles and just plugging the printer in and going. We got print samples off a lot of new machines before purchasing and the s80600 blows everything away, including the s60600 and s40600. The grays of the s80 put even the s60 to shame.
The thing that does scare me about the epson (not really but it's on my mind) is their HP like service contracts. Would feel much better if it was a local company like it was with Roland.
I was comparing the Mimaki and Epson current models. I guarantee you I could put 2 prints in front of you and you wouldn't be able to tell the difference.
I was comparing the Mimaki and Epson current models. I guarantee you I could put 2 prints in front of you and you wouldn't be able to tell the difference.
Perhaps, but I doubt it if I supplied the print file.
I've seen the prints off the jv33 160, that's what mimaki we are talking about right? And it does not have light black ink correct?
Ok you win I see the jv 150 does have light black ink. So yea I probably couldn't tell the difference in that. Samples we got were from the jv 300.
Offer still stands about the roland though.
Yes But...the ink costs are higher, Epsons maintenance is easier, and you will pay 35% more for the Mimaki. Including delivery and set up.What tech is new? Which Epson were you comparing speeds to also? The quality we get out of ours is great even at low res 6 pt is perfectly legible. Sounds like they didn't have it dialed in right or something then. The Epson's get a lot of praise but they're fairly new so it's going to be talked about more. Using anecdotal evidence from here, neither of these printers seem to have problems.
If you want to argue new vs old (but not point out what it is) you can also argue that the JV150 has been on the market longer which is typically a safer bet than one that has not been. Like said before, it should come down to the dealer at this point.