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Good printer for small stock (envelopes, cards, labels)
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Good printer for small stock (envelopes, cards, labels)
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Good printer for small stock (envelopes, cards, labels) |
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#1 |
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In our small office setup, we print a lot of envelopes. Mostly #9,
some #10. We also print some 4x6 and 5x8 cards and various other small forms including 3x5 cards. Once a year we print Christmas envelopes of various sizes. I would like to also print on the Christmas cards, but we don't have a printer that will feed and orient/align them reliably. Our production printer is a big HP 5000, which does a great job on standard paper. It also does a good job with envelopes if we remember to open the back tray, but it is inconvenient to be loading and unloading envelopes. It has some problems with smaller stock. We would like to buy a small printer that will be dedicated to #9 envelopes and can also be used for other small stock at times. The top priority is handling small stock flawlessly. I don't care if it is laser of inkjet. Color would be good, but nor required. It will be attached to the network via usb to a printer hub. We already have fax/copier/scanner so multifunction is not needed. I would appeciate any recommendations. -- |
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#2 |
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On Tue, 02 Jan 2007 21:13:04 -0800, LurfysMa <invalid@invalid.invalid>
wrote: >In our small office setup, we print a lot of envelopes. Mostly #9, >some #10. We also print some 4x6 and 5x8 cards and various other small >forms including 3x5 cards. Once a year we print Christmas envelopes of >various sizes. I would like to also print on the Christmas cards, but >we don't have a printer that will feed and orient/align them reliably. > >Our production printer is a big HP 5000, which does a great job on >standard paper. It also does a good job with envelopes if we remember >to open the back tray, but it is inconvenient to be loading and >unloading envelopes. It has some problems with smaller stock. > >We would like to buy a small printer that will be dedicated to #9 >envelopes and can also be used for other small stock at times. > >The top priority is handling small stock flawlessly. I don't care if >it is laser of inkjet. Color would be good, but nor required. > >It will be attached to the network via usb to a printer hub. > >We already have fax/copier/scanner so multifunction is not needed. > >I would appeciate any recommendations. Here are my priorities a little better organized. The top 4 are requirements. The rest are "would be nice". 1. Flawless paper handling for small forms. 2. Can feed a stack of envelopes, cards, labels. 3. Straight path so forms not bent. 4. Can handle thicker stock (at least card stock). 5. Inkjet preferred because of heat to custom paper. 6. Duplex would be a real treat, but not required. 7. Color would be nice, but not required. Probably all inkjets are color these days. 8. Price. Not really a factor. -- |
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#3 |
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Guest
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The Canon IP4300 does well with various sizes of envelopes.
LurfysMa wrote: > In our small office setup, we print a lot of envelopes. Mostly #9, > some #10. We also print some 4x6 and 5x8 cards and various other small > forms including 3x5 cards. Once a year we print Christmas envelopes of > various sizes. I would like to also print on the Christmas cards, but > we don't have a printer that will feed and orient/align them reliably. > > Our production printer is a big HP 5000, which does a great job on > standard paper. It also does a good job with envelopes if we remember > to open the back tray, but it is inconvenient to be loading and > unloading envelopes. It has some problems with smaller stock. > > We would like to buy a small printer that will be dedicated to #9 > envelopes and can also be used for other small stock at times. > > The top priority is handling small stock flawlessly. I don't care if > it is laser of inkjet. Color would be good, but nor required. > > It will be attached to the network via usb to a printer hub. > > We already have fax/copier/scanner so multifunction is not needed. > > I would appeciate any recommendations. > > |
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#4 |
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Guest
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HI , WE SELL A ENVELOPE PRINTER DOING 83 PER MINUTE - 5000 A HOUR ...
BUT MOST PROBEBLY OUT OF YOUR SPENDING LIMIT , ITS PRICED IN THE RANGE OF $4000 - FINANCED 39 MONTHS FOR ABOUT $115 PER MONTH LET ME KNOW IF YOU HAVE ANY INTEREST http://www.secap.com/product_5kle.htm HILLEL @ CITYWIDE OFFICE SOLUTIONS INC. On Jan 2, 11:40 pm, LurfysMa <inva...@invalid.invalid> wrote: > On Tue, 02 Jan 2007 21:13:04 -0800, LurfysMa <inva...@invalid.invalid> > wrote: > > > > > > >In our small office setup, we print a lot of envelopes. Mostly #9, > >some #10. We also print some 4x6 and 5x8 cards and various other small > >forms including 3x5 cards. Once a year we print Christmas envelopes of > >various sizes. I would like to also print on the Christmas cards, but > >we don't have a printer that will feed and orient/align them reliably. > > >Our production printer is a big HP 5000, which does a great job on > >standard paper. It also does a good job with envelopes if we remember > >to open the back tray, but it is inconvenient to be loading and > >unloading envelopes. It has some problems with smaller stock. > > >We would like to buy a small printer that will be dedicated to #9 > >envelopes and can also be used for other small stock at times. > > >The top priority is handling small stock flawlessly. I don't care if > >it is laser of inkjet. Color would be good, but nor required. > > >It will be attached to the network via usb to a printer hub. > > >We already have fax/copier/scanner so multifunction is not needed. > > >I would appeciate any recommendations.Here are my priorities a little better organized. The top 4 are > requirements. The rest are "would be nice". > > 1. Flawless paper handling for small forms. > 2. Can feed a stack of envelopes, cards, labels. > 3. Straight path so forms not bent. > 4. Can handle thicker stock (at least card stock). > 5. Inkjet preferred because of heat to custom paper. > 6. Duplex would be a real treat, but not required. > 7. Color would be nice, but not required. Probably all inkjets are > color these days. > 8. Price. Not really a factor. > > --- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text - |
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#5 |
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Guest
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I have an interest but will never buy from a loser spammer. :-$
HILLELTECH@gmail.com wrote: HI , WE SELL A ENVELOPE PRINTER DOING 83 PER MINUTE - 5000 A HOUR ... BUT MOST PROBEBLY OUT OF YOUR SPENDING LIMIT , ITS PRICED IN THE RANGE OF $4000 - FINANCED 39 MONTHS FOR ABOUT $115 PER MONTH LET ME KNOW IF YOU HAVE ANY INTEREST http://www.secap.com/product_5kle.htm HILLEL @ CITYWIDE OFFICE SOLUTIONS INC. On Jan 2, 11:40 pm, LurfysMa <inva...@invalid.invalid> wrote: On Tue, 02 Jan 2007 21:13:04 -0800, LurfysMa <inva...@invalid.invalid> wrote: In our small office setup, we print a lot of envelopes. Mostly #9, some #10. We also print some 4x6 and 5x8 cards and various other small forms including 3x5 cards. Once a year we print Christmas envelopes of various sizes. I would like to also print on the Christmas cards, but we don't have a printer that will feed and orient/align them reliably. Our production printer is a big HP 5000, which does a great job on standard paper. It also does a good job with envelopes if we remember to open the back tray, but it is inconvenient to be loading and unloading envelopes. It has some problems with smaller stock. We would like to buy a small printer that will be dedicated to #9 envelopes and can also be used for other small stock at times. The top priority is handling small stock flawlessly. I don't care if it is laser of inkjet. Color would be good, but nor required. It will be attached to the network via usb to a printer hub. We already have fax/copier/scanner so multifunction is not needed. I would appeciate any recommendations.Here are my priorities a little better organized. The top 4 are requirements. The rest are "would be nice". 1. Flawless paper handling for small forms. 2. Can feed a stack of envelopes, cards, labels. 3. Straight path so forms not bent. 4. Can handle thicker stock (at least card stock). 5. Inkjet preferred because of heat to custom paper. 6. Duplex would be a real treat, but not required. 7. Color would be nice, but not required. Probably all inkjets are color these days. 8. Price. Not really a factor. --- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text - |
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