I do echo the above about spending more upfront and less on consumables over time. I can also recommend the Laserjet Color Enterprise M555, but that's going to be more than you're wanting to spend. I believe these (and similar solutions from other manufacturers) are going to be the way going forward, but obviously it's up to use case. I appreciate the suggestion though, thank you!ĭarn, it'd be a great solution otherwise. This is very helpful, thank you for sharing this info! Today they're pretty much disposable when they die. Used to be your console TV cost a few thousand bucks and you had the repair guy come to your house. In short, it's just about like buying televisions. Obviously putting that much effort/expense into a sub-$500 printer is not cost effective. To fix an HP printer we'd have to drive two hours to drop it off and return to the office pay at least a $100 diagnostic fee and then usually get an estimate of not less than $200. HP has tightened up on who they allow as certified repair centers, so for us the closest option is an hour away. I'll also throw in that with any sub-$500 laser printer, if/when it suffers problems it's danged near a throw away situation. They leak toner everywhere and occasionally have some that just don't work at all. a 4-pack of toner costs less than a single mfg's brand name) but the cartridges don't work well. The off-brands certainly save a lot up front (e.g. I WILL offer though that we tried the off-brand toner for about a year and then went back to the name brand. We're also getting ready to try a Ricoh C250FW, as we've had good luck with the very large Ricohs, but I can't offer any opinion yet on how they are. I will offer that we're using several of the Xerox C405 models, but those are $700 - $800, the reason being is they're an MFP and we need the copying / scanning capabilities as well.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |