We have 7 4900's at work a while now. No clogging issues but one of them drifts quite a bit.
Wow, nice throughput, in which case I'm guessing they get used a lot and don't have time to clog; but the older Epsons you can leave them cold for months.
Kolor-Pikker Goldmember 2,790 posts Likes: 59 Joined Aug 2009 Location: Moscow More info | Jan 24, 2013 17:46 | #16 R1200GS wrote in post #15529629 We have 7 4900's at work a while now. No clogging issues but one of them drifts quite a bit. Wow, nice throughput, in which case I'm guessing they get used a lot and don't have time to clog; but the older Epsons you can leave them cold for months. 5DmkII | 24-70 f/2.8L II | Pentax 645Z | 55/2.8 SDM | 120/4 Macro | 150/2.8 IF
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Jan 25, 2013 05:58 | #17 Kolor-Pikker wrote in post #15529654 Wow, nice throughput, in which case I'm guessing they get used a lot and don't have time to clog; but the older Epsons you can leave them cold for months. Mine and a couple of the others get used a ton everyday. The others don't get used nearly as much. And by that I mean a couple of times a week so yeah, they really don't have time to clog up. We also have a 64 inch printer. I think it's the GS6000. "No matter where you go, there you are" Buckaroo Banzai
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Lowner "I'm the original idiot" 12,924 posts Likes: 18 Joined Jul 2007 Location: Salisbury, UK. More info | Jan 25, 2013 07:38 | #18 My previous Epson (an 800?) used to clog a lot and eventually died when the enforced continual head cleaning filled the waste ink "nappy". But touch wood my present 2880 does not, its been very good for a number of years now. It would seem that Epson have overcome the reputation they had for clogging. Richard
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Kolor-Pikker Goldmember 2,790 posts Likes: 59 Joined Aug 2009 Location: Moscow More info | Jan 25, 2013 07:49 | #19 B&H has a price of $450 for a full set of 80ml 3880 inks, not bad given the 4900 200ml inks cost $950 in all. 5DmkII | 24-70 f/2.8L II | Pentax 645Z | 55/2.8 SDM | 120/4 Macro | 150/2.8 IF
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tricky500 Senior Member 424 posts Joined Sep 2010 Location: Overland, MO. More info | Jan 25, 2013 08:12 | #20 I use an Epson 9900 and 9800. They have both been absolute TANKS. Our Epson 9800 is probably 6-7 years old and still runs like a champ. Meanwhile I've KILLED about 6 HPZ3200's. We run printers ragged at my work. The color fidelity with Epson is phenomenal as well. - Paul
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Kolor-Pikker Goldmember 2,790 posts Likes: 59 Joined Aug 2009 Location: Moscow More info | Jan 25, 2013 08:17 | #21 Bought my 9800 back when it was state of the art, I wonder how many rolls I put throught it now? The pro Epsons are invincible. I think mine will keep working for another forever and a half. 5DmkII | 24-70 f/2.8L II | Pentax 645Z | 55/2.8 SDM | 120/4 Macro | 150/2.8 IF
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Jan 25, 2013 10:44 | #22 Lowner wrote in post #15531689 My previous Epson (an 800?) used to clog a lot and eventually died when the enforced continual head cleaning filled the waste ink "nappy". But touch wood my present 2880 does not, its been very good for a number of years now. It would seem that Epson have overcome the reputation they had for clogging. Personally I'd be happy with a printer from Canon or Epson, both seem to produce reliable products. I'd like to see Epson use larger ink cartridges and offer us recycling of used carts, but thats a side issue. I hear your Richard - I think both Epson and Canon make fine mainstream and pro printers.........kind of like Ford vs. Chevy for pickup trucks, Ginger vs. MaryAnne GEAR LIST
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FeXL Senior Member 493 posts Likes: 3 Joined Dec 2007 More info | We ran the wheels off an Epson R1800, thousand of event prints. The ink diaper indicator finally went off & shut down the printer, we reset it & ran it for another 6 or 8 months in a boot tray in case it leaked. It never did. We saved the cartridges in the hopes that somebody would recycle them, too, have a couple boxes with ~600 carts between them.
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Jan 25, 2013 11:16 | #24 FeXL wrote in post #15532341 We ran the wheels off an Epson R1800, thousand of event prints. The ink diaper indicator finally went off & shut down the printer, we reset it & ran it for another 6 or 8 months in a boot tray in case it leaked. It never did. We saved the cartridges in the hopes that somebody would recycle them, too, have a couple boxes with ~600 carts between them. Finally upgraded to an Epson R2000 about 2 years ago. It's even better than the R1800 and will take 13" paper. Nicer colors, doesn't clog as much as the R1800, ink carts are bigger so your costs are lowered some. Recommended. One thing that we considered with our R1800/R2000 purchases: we like the clear gloss overlay. You can frame without having to use glass & without laminating the print. The 38xx doesn't have that. The 3880 does not have the GLOSS COAT (ink)? I did not know that and will have to re-examine the specs on the machine. Thanks for pointing that out FeXL GEAR LIST
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Kolor-Pikker Goldmember 2,790 posts Likes: 59 Joined Aug 2009 Location: Moscow More info | Jan 25, 2013 11:48 | #25 sapearl wrote in post #15532362 The 3880 does not have the GLOSS COAT (ink)? I did not know that and will have to re-examine the specs on the machine. Thanks for pointing that out FeXL . When you mentioned "boot" tray did you mean just a simple tray in which the printer sits, or are you from G.Britain and you were printing from the trunk of you car? - StuHooboy, well, the HG2 inks were used by some Epson printers and ended with the R2000, they had the gloss coat ink because it was a period of time when pigment inks weren't impressive when used with many paper types. The R2400 went over to the K3 (triple black) system to overcome this, and looks much more natural when used with matte papers, but some people still prefer the gloss coat inks for glossy prints. 5DmkII | 24-70 f/2.8L II | Pentax 645Z | 55/2.8 SDM | 120/4 Macro | 150/2.8 IF
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kirkt Cream of the Crop More info | Jan 25, 2013 13:45 | #26 I used a 3880 at work for a while. In addition to the many positive comments here, also consider the wealth of paper profiles available, both for Epson and third-party papers. I found the ones I used to be easy to match with a few iterations of calibration and profiling my display. Viewing prints under a Solux 4700K light at a reasonable distance gave me calibration targets that were easily achievable, like 140 cd/m2 and 5750°K white point. Color and luminance was spot on compared to my Eizo display. Kirk
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Yno Senior Member 910 posts Likes: 92 Joined Jan 2008 Location: San Jose, California More info | I am strictly amateur, but I like to do my own printing. I usually make 13 x 19 prints and mat them to fit an 18 x 24 frame. I am now running out of wall space in my house. Going to a 17 inch printer would be a large order of magnitude increase in cost of all components, including the larger house I would have to buy. I'd rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy.
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FeXL Senior Member 493 posts Likes: 3 Joined Dec 2007 More info | Jan 27, 2013 11:57 | #28 sapearl wrote in post #15532362 The 3880 does not have the GLOSS COAT (ink)? I did not know that and will have to re-examine the specs on the machine. Thanks for pointing that out FeXL . When you mentioned "boot" tray did you mean just a simple tray in which the printer sits, or are you from G.Britain and you were printing from the trunk of you car? - StuK-P talked about gloss differential in a post above. For us, that's less an issue than having a print with good "usability". The only thing we use our R2000 for is event photography, sports. Most of these images are going to be put up on a wall. They're going to be handled by dozens of grubby little hands and, with a quick wipe of a barely damp cloth, they'll be more or less clean. I don't know that I'd try that on a print without an overcoat.
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Modigity Senior Member 505 posts Likes: 2 Joined Apr 2011 Location: Pacific Northwest More info | I use both canon and Epson (ipf8300, 7800, 3880) and they are all great printers. The canon ink is cheaper and goes further but you have to replace the heads so it all about evens out in usage costs. Quality in the newer canons is but better than it used to be and is in my option equal to the quality that the epsons turn out. Morgan Ellis
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Jan 27, 2013 21:06 | #30 kirkt wrote in post #15532937 I used a 3880 at work for a while. In addition to the many positive comments here, also consider the wealth of paper profiles available, both for Epson and third-party papers. I found the ones I used to be easy to match with a few iterations of calibration and profiling my display. Viewing prints under a Solux 4700K light at a reasonable distance gave me calibration targets that were easily achievable, like 140 cd/m2 and 5750°K white point. Color and luminance was spot on compared to my Eizo display. I am in the market for a printer again and will probably purchase this printer. kirk Eizo display - very nice Kirk GEAR LIST
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