dtaylor said:* Even when it warns that a cart is low, you keep printing. There's probably a dozen or more 16x20's left in the cart. You can change carts mid-print without affecting the print, so you just keep going until it asks for a new cart.
* Changing a cart does not touch the ink levels in the other carts. Only the changed line is primed. Most ink jets prime every line once a single cart is changed which defeats the whole purpose of individual carts and is a big part of the reason why ink disappears into a void.
The only drawback is that the glossy and matte blacks share a line, so if you change paper types you lose some ink (a few bucks worth). So you need to batch your prints by type. But the printer performs so well...and the carts last so long...that this is hardly worth complaining about.
danski0224 said:I have a feeling that the Pro-10 doesn't have "hot swappable" ink tanks.
I have also been wondering if all inks are primed when one tank is replaced. I haven't been able to find any support in the manual yet.
Is there an Epson that shares the strong points outlined in your posting but doesn't require a change of black ink for glossy/matte?
danski0224 said:I looked at the 4900, and the net is full of poor reviews. I get it that it is more common to post poor reviews than good ones.
Any particular time to watch for Epson deals, with "Black Friday" and "cyber Monday" distant memories now?
mackguyver said:I bought a Pro-100 several weeks ago when Adorama had it for $100AR with free paper. For that price, I thought it would be worthwhile to get some additional control and convenience over my prints. So far I've made about 30 prints (mostly 8x10) and the indicators still show everything as full. Does it drop like a cheap car fuel gauge or something? I.e. 300 miles to half tank, 350 miles to 1/4 tank, 10 miles to Empty!
danski0224 said:Well, I happened upon a gently used Epson 3800 for a fair price. It was local, so I could check it out.
Had to buy some ink, but I'm still in it for less than a 3880 refurb and way less than a new 3880.
Doesn't seem to be too many real life major differences between the 3800 and 3880 based on a quick search.
Network setup (wired) was a bit of a pain. No PnP there. Had to read the manual.
Tried out some prints onto Canon paper, and as long as I pick the right settings, print output looks very, very good.
danski0224 said:inkjet printing isn't "economical", but small ink cartridges don't match well with bigger prints...
Thanks for the detailed reply and that's some interesting math! I have owned several Epson printers over the years and have never been happy with the color, even after extensive calibration. The Canon profiles and ability to print in 16-bit color aren't perfect, but MUCH closer than any of my calibrated Epson's ever were. Being able to make a single print versus many to get the color right is going to save me a lot of money.danski0224 said:mackguyver said:I bought a Pro-100 several weeks ago when Adorama had it for $100AR with free paper. For that price, I thought it would be worthwhile to get some additional control and convenience over my prints. So far I've made about 30 prints (mostly 8x10) and the indicators still show everything as full. Does it drop like a cheap car fuel gauge or something? I.e. 300 miles to half tank, 350 miles to 1/4 tank, 10 miles to Empty!
I have a Pro-10 and the ink levels drop fast in my use.
I have some 13 x 19 prints I have done, and those are quite a bit bigger than 4 x 6 or 8 x 10. Could ba a "duh" moment, or maybe I had different expectations.
I think I have done about 10 each 13 x 19 and probably 20 8.5 x 11 and maybe a dozen 4 x 6, and I'm through the starter inks and getting into a 3rd change on some.
The Pro-10 cartridges have an ink volume of 14ml and cost ~$16 each.
The Epson 3800 cartridges have an ink volume of 80ml and cost ~$60 each.
Simply based on volume and OEM ink costs, Canon is $91.42 for 80ml of ink (5.7 Canon cartridges for 80ml). This doesn't account for wasted ink during cartridge replacement. Six cartridges = $96. Both printers don't use the same number of ink cartridges, so a direct comparison is difficult.
There is a print cost comparison at Red River Papers, and the Canon is roughly 2x Epson per print in their testing.
There is an established Epson ink aftermarket too.
So, the smaller cartridges explain why the levels drop fast on bigger prints.
I find the Canon Pro-10 output very nice, but it isn't economical*. It would have been better to figure this out beforehand
* inkjet printing isn't "economical", but small ink cartridges don't match well with bigger prints...
mackguyver said:Thanks for the detailed reply and that's some interesting math! I have owned several Epson printers over the years and have never been happy with the color, even after extensive calibration. The Canon profiles and ability to print in 16-bit color aren't perfect, but MUCH closer than any of my calibrated Epson's ever were. Being able to make a single print versus many to get the color right is going to save me a lot of money.
dtaylor said:Good find. There's very little real difference between the two.
I highly recommend trying out Epson's Hot Press Bright paper. Epson has a paper sample pack that's worth getting. It has two sheets each of all the press variations, exhibition fiber, etc. I was a glossy paper fan until I tried the press papers. Of course there's a ton of papers from 3rd parties as well.
dtaylor said:Exactly. I do consider the 3800/3880 economical once you've dealt with the up front cost above the value of the ink included with the printer.
+10000000000 on that one, but doubt it will ever happen! I've stocked up on the paper, too - the buy one get 9 free deal was crazy!danski0224 said:I am hoping for a buy 1 get 4 ink sale....
;D
mackguyver said:Thanks for the detailed reply and that's some interesting math! I have owned several Epson printers over the years and have never been happy with the color, even after extensive calibration. The Canon profiles and ability to print in 16-bit color aren't perfect, but MUCH closer than any of my calibrated Epson's ever were. Being able to make a single print versus many to get the color right is going to save me a lot of money.
danski0224 said:I did pick up a pack of Canon matte paper, and although I didn't like it at first, the look has grown on me.
danski0224 said:Granted, the printer interface for the Pro-10 is much nicer than the Epson, and switching black inks is automatic on the Canon and must be done manually on the 3800.