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LASER AND INKJET PRINTERS
If you're thinking about buying a new inkjet printer or laser printer
you may find these tips handy. Remember, it is worth shopping around on
the Internet for the best price once you've found the particular printer
you're looking for.
Buying Laser and Inkjet Printers - 10
Quick Buying Tips 1. First decide what kind of documents you will print. Color,
monochrome, text, graphics or photos. If you will print black text and
won’t need color, you may want to go for a monochrome laser printer
which offers the best text quality and speed. But if you’ll print high
resolution photos you may want an inkjet printer which offers the best
photo and graphics quality. If you want true photo quality outputs, go
for the photo inkjet printers that specialize in photo printing. 2. Inkjet printers may seem affordable, but consider the cost of ink
cartridges too. Before you buy your inkjet printer, check the prices and
yields of the ink cartridges and find out an estimate monthly cost
according to the number of pages you will print in a month. 3. Laser printer toner cartridges prices will be higher than inkjet
cartridges prices. But toner cartridges last much longer which makes
their cost per page less in the long term. 4. Bear in mind that the speeds stated by the manufacturers are often
higher than real life speeds. Inkjet or laser printers’ print speeds may
vary depending on many factors such as print mode, system configuration,
page coverage, document complexity and software. A typical inkjet
printer print speed may vary between 1 to 28 ppm for black text and 1 to
20 ppm for color photo or graphics. A mid-range monochrome laser
printer’s print speed may vary between 6 to 25 ppm for sharp black texts
and 2 to 20 ppm for black & white graphics. A typical color laser
printer’s print speed will vary between 6 to 20 ppm for black text and 1
to 12 ppm for color graphics. 5. If you print a large number of documents each month, make sure the
inkjet or laser printer’s monthly duty cycle is high enough to cover
your needs. Duty Cycle means number of pages a printer is able to handle
in a month. 6. Don’t spend extra money on some special features that you will not
need. For instance if you are a home user you may not need a laser or
inkjet printer with an Ethernet port (most monochrome laser printers
have Ethernet ports). 7. Check the connectivity specs (USB port etc.) of the printer. Make
sure the printer is compatible with your computer. 8. Some laser or inkjet printers come with enough memory to print
anything you’ll need. These printers do not allow memory upgrades.
Others that do allow memory upgrades may not come with enough memory. So
check if the inkjet printer has enough memory for the types of documents
you will print. 9. Choose a laser or inkjet printer with enough paper capacity. So
you won’t have to keep adding paper. For example, if you print 20 pages
a day, get an inkjet or laser printer that holds 100 pages, so you won’t
need to add paper before 5 days. 10. Make sure that the manufacturer of the inkjet or laser printer
provides convenient tech support and driver updates on their website.
Sally Adams
writes articles that contain helpful tips on printing. Find out
how you can lower your printing costs at
http://www.printcountry.com.
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