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Buying a Laser Printer

 
 
naza911@hotmail.co.uk
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      16th Dec 2006
Hi,
I set up my new business from home and printing from my old injet is
just not affordable. I was told that instead of paying for new
cartdedges everyweek. Buy a laser printer. I went and had a look aty a
few affordable printers. But it is diffucult to understand what is
meant by all the terms the are listed on the pages like Page Monthly
cycle. What specs do i need to know about when buying the new laser
printer and the amount of pages a standard laser can do. Thanks

 
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Tony
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      16th Dec 2006
(E-Mail Removed) wrote:
>Hi,
>I set up my new business from home and printing from my old injet is
>just not affordable. I was told that instead of paying for new
>cartdedges everyweek. Buy a laser printer. I went and had a look aty a
>few affordable printers. But it is diffucult to understand what is
>meant by all the terms the are listed on the pages like Page Monthly
>cycle. What specs do i need to know about when buying the new laser
>printer and the amount of pages a standard laser can do. Thanks


There are several important things to consider. I am assuming you are looking
at a monochrome laser rather than colour.
Monthly duty cycle is the amount of pages the printer is designed to handle, if
you exceed this number the printer will continue to print but there is a
possibility that some manufacturers will not honour the warranty.
Cost per page is very important, usually the manufacturer will specify the
number of pages a toner cartridge will print (usually at 5% coverage, which is
a surprising amount of printing usually more than enough for a letter). Entry
level lasers (also true of entry level inkjets) are usually more expensive to
run than the more expensive models.
Some lasers have drums built into the cartridge and some do not. If you choose
a printer with a separate drum unit you need to factor that cost into your cost
per page calculation.
Examples are - Most HP lasers have integral drums so the cost per page is easy
to calculate, most Brother and OKI lasers have separate drums and toner
cartridges.
Next there are some other components that will require replacement in due
course like Fusers but this is not an issue with entry level printers because
they are priced in such a way that replacement of the fuser is largely
uneconomical. You may need to replace pick up rollers at some time, these are
easy with most HP lasers but harder with some other makes.
You need to see an example of the output quality since this varies quite a bit
between models. More expensive lasers are designed to be repairable, entry
level lasers are not (with the exception of toners, drums and feed rollers).
If you plan to print labels or transparencies you must use media that is
designed for lasers, non-laser transparencies and label stock will almost
certainly seriously damage a laser printer. Also, labels are best printed on a
printer (of any variety) with a straight or near straight paper path. Envelopes
can also be challenging unless you have a straight paper path.
The paper that emerges from a laser printer usually has a slight curl due to
the heat applied to the paper, the amount of curl varies according to the model
and the paper used. This is rarely an issue since the curl disappears over time
but for some applications this is important.
Laser printers rarely print to the edge of the page, this is a design
constraint and is not an issue with business documents but look at the margin
specs (top, bottom and side margins) for the printer before you buy.
Lastly, there are essentially two types of printer - GDI (Host Based), despite
many negative comments on these printers they work exceptionally well and are
slightly cheaper than the alternative. I know many businesses that use GDI
printers for normal document printing. GDI means that the rasterising, or
document formatting is done in the PC. The other type uses PCL or Postscript,
these printers do the rasterising in the printer itself which reduces the
amount of work the PC has to do. These printers are usually far better for very
complex documents but provide little advantage for most text documents. This
last topic may well start a debate here, many people have strong views about
GDI printers, all I can say is that they work very well for most businesses and
indeed most home users unless they print very complex ducuments, documents with
a lot of graphics fall into this category.
Tony
MS MVP Printing/Imaging

 
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Warren Block
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      17th Dec 2006
Tony <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

> Laser printers rarely print to the edge of the page, this is a design
> constraint and is not an issue with business documents but look at the margin
> specs (top, bottom and side margins) for the printer before you buy.


As with inkjets, although often a laser can print closer to the edge,
particularly the bottom edge.

> Lastly, there are essentially two types of printer - GDI (Host Based), despite
> many negative comments on these printers they work exceptionally well and are
> slightly cheaper than the alternative. I know many businesses that use GDI
> printers for normal document printing. GDI means that the rasterising, or
> document formatting is done in the PC. The other type uses PCL or Postscript,
> these printers do the rasterising in the printer itself which reduces the
> amount of work the PC has to do. These printers are usually far better for very
> complex documents but provide little advantage for most text documents. This
> last topic may well start a debate here, many people have strong views about
> GDI printers, all I can say is that they work very well for most businesses and
> indeed most home users unless they print very complex ducuments, documents with
> a lot of graphics fall into this category.


Certainly there are people with host-based printers who don't regret
their choice.

But the cost savings are minimal, and the ways a Winprinter can let you
down are numerous. There's a reason Winprinters are only found at the
bottom of the range.

--
Warren Block * Rapid City, South Dakota * USA
 
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jasee
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      17th Dec 2006
Warren Block wrote:
> Tony <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> Certainly there are people with host-based printers who don't regret
> their choice.
>
> But the cost savings are minimal, and the ways a Winprinter can let
> you down are numerous. There's a reason Winprinters are only found
> at the bottom of the range.


Also, as these printers send information to the printers in a special way
they can't be used with external print servers and need drivers specifically
written for that printer and for the operating system (a version of
Microsoft Windows) so AFAIK there are no drivers for any such printers for
Linux (for instance) and if you change to another operating system (for
instance Vista) the existing drivers will probably not work.


 
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Clint Young
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      20th Dec 2006
On Sat, 16 Dec 2006 10:28:42 -0800, naza911 wrote:

> Hi,
> I set up my new business from home and printing from my old injet is
> just not affordable. I was told that instead of paying for new
> cartdedges everyweek. Buy a laser printer. I went and had a look aty a
> few affordable printers. But it is diffucult to understand what is
> meant by all the terms the are listed on the pages like Page Monthly
> cycle. What specs do i need to know about when buying the new laser
> printer and the amount of pages a standard laser can do. Thanks


I think you should take to heart everything that Tony said. I couldn't
have explained it any better myself! (Then again, thats why he is a
Printing/Imaging MVP! lol. ;-) )

At any rate, I think you should definitely go with a laser printer. If
you think you might want to print in color in the future, a color laser
printer might be in the cards. However, (and this also depends on the
volume you will be printing) I think if you found a good condition HP
LaserJet 4000 on eBay you would be happy with that, or if you have even
lower printing requirements, something like an HP Laserjet 2100 (which can
be found for even as low as $39.99 + S/H for a low page count).

I have an HP Laserjet 2100 on my wife's computer (which she just prints
things out on occasionally) and a Laserjet 4000 with a NIC & Duplexer for
my larger printing jobs (and an envelope feeder for large mail merges).
For my color printing I use an HP Color LaserJet 4500. It prints business
cards and brochures beautifully. I personally love the HP line of
printers, but can't say much for their newer models. The
aforementioned printers are all pretty much workhorses, and are designed
to have the parts replaced as Tony has mentioned. ie: Drum, fuser, etc.

I wish you the best of luck. Please let us know what decision you end up
making.

--
Clint Young


 
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naza
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      29th Dec 2006
Thanx for all the help from all of you. I had a look at many Printers
and i think the Samsung ML 2010 mono laser printer is the one for me.
It has low running costs and i got it at £50 online with P&P. So i
saved enough to buy myself a HP Inkjet for all my colour printing.

 
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