I like the thermal printing because of the metalics and the possible color gamut because of spot color foils. Hitting a PMS color without a hitch is nice, then throwing in some metalic is nice too. These printers are SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO slow. You realize if you're printing process colors, it runs the yellow ink the full way through, feeds back through, runs the cyan, feeds back through, runs the magenta, feeds back through and runs the black. 34 sq ft./hr on that thing, my soljet pro III, given it's 54" wide, prints at over 400 sq ft./hr. The 30" versacamm has to print faster than 34 sq. ft./hr. If you print a lot of metalic, or can't color match worth a damn, then a thermal is a good choice. With the way roland has taken their eco-sol's there really is not mess, no head clogging, it's almost as if it's an aqueous printer. So when you say "inkjet" please define what type of "inkjet" you're talking about, "head clogging inkjet" is not a true statement. Aqueous printers, like your epsons and your hp designjets, don't have a clogging problem because they use a water based ink. Solvent printers of yester year have a problem with the solvent ink drying in the print heads, technology has fixed this and these "head clogging solventjets" are older machines, nothing you're going to run into when buying a new eco-sol printer.