Looking to expand the business offering. Looking at entry level UV printers. Which ones are great? Which ones in your experience to stay away from? We are a small company so replacing heads every 6 months is not an option. Thank for your time to give me some guidance on this.
Depends on your opinion of entry level.Looking to expand the business offering. Looking at entry level UV printers. Which ones are great? Which ones in your experience to stay away from? We are a small company so replacing heads every 6 months is not an option. Thank for your time to give me some guidance on this.
Agreed, entry level can mean many things. Avoid UV printers with Epson heads if you can as they are not designed for UV ink (that is, they do not have an in-built heater). Ricoh heads are great, Kyocera heads are better.Depends on your opinion of entry level.
The cheap China machines that are built on epson engines will have you replacing heads frequently. The properly made machines running higher end epson heads, or Ricoh heads will last longer. Quality of the ink is another conversation.
Hi Signheremd,We have a FluidColor Flatbed printer with Ricoh Gen 6 heads. Great combination of durability and resolution for the price. (The Gen 6 Ricoh heads are great.)
Prior to that we had a CET with Gen 4 Ricoh heads. Definitely a more demanding beast to keep quality up.
Both are HandTop machines. They take a bit of learning up front so you can pull daily maintenance and be able to calibrate when needed - but training comes with purchase. FluidColor is a company that started out by refurbishing these types of printers. So they have beefed up some things based upon that experience - inks are formulated to not clog the nozzles, some components are beefier. If you want to print right onto 4x8ft substrate, these machines will make you some money and save you lots of labor (MDOs, Komatex/Komacel, Aluminum, Magnets, PET Banner material, Coroplast, Aluminum Composites).
If you have a size and number of print heads, I can tell you exactly what one will cost. We only sell them in the midwest but there are really good distributors all across the country.Hi Signheremd,
Can you share what price (range) you paid for the FluidColor?
Thanks
Nope....it isn't. But they are great investments. If you are currently printing with a solvent or latex printer, you'll save about $70/roll in ink alone....and then if you are printing on SAV and then mounting those prints, you are then saving another $150'sh for the SAV (54x150) and then keep in mind no labor for finishing on the laminator. Just the ink and SAV alone are going to put about $225 in your pocket for every 150 feet of prints you print and mount. The monthly payment for these machines is around $2K/month....the math works pretty well.Thanks for all the replies. I will have to do some more research and pondering...100K is not pocket change!