Color MFP suggestion
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Last year we picked up two Dell c2665dn MFP printers. On the floor they really looked like a good option as it had all the bells and whistles.
Fax, Scan to email, address book, color, etc...Fast forward thirteen months. Warranty has expired and both are having 'issues'. One is having a system error, reboot it and it may work or cycle right back into the error. The other has drum streaks half the time after only 21,688 pages.
I'm looking at:
- System Error unit: $350 to extend the warranty and 'repair / replace'
- Messy Drum unit: $145 for a Drum kit which is suppose to last 60,000 pages
The drum kit unit is in HR / Executive suite,.. so the check signers and Grant writers use it.... need to make them happy!
Or is there a better machine that I don't have to replace the whole machine every year..
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I have a Brother MFC9970CDW. I love this thing. I have had it almost 2 years now. The toner is reasonably priced (I will add links below). Super easy to network across multiple platforms (even finally figured out how to get a chromebook to print to it). Great auto feed scanner and copier. I have nothing bad to say other than size as it is heavy and pretty big for my office.
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We have a Brother colour laser. Not an MFP. But we love it. Works great. Best printer that we have had in a long time.
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Interesting - my experience with Brothers haven't been that great. HP used to be the go to engine for printing, but now it seems that most are pretty reliable.
I know that Dell is just re-branded Lexmark printers, which are suppose to be good. But this is a issue i don't think I should have after only 13 months and 21,000 pages...
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Any number of things can affect printer life, power, humidity, people, etc.
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Especially for a $600 printer.....
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@Dashrender said:
Any number of things can affect printer life, power, humidity, people, etc.
True - most people don't know that the wrapper that paper (reams of) is packaged in has a plastic or waxy coating - which is there to prevent the paper from picking up to much moisture since it'll cause issues in a printer.
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I have had horrible experience with Lexmark, though they were consumer-grade. They automatically removed the Windows print spooler and replaced it with their own, so if you ever wanted to use another printer, you were screwed. And, they didn't work worth a darn. The Brother has been great, all around.
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It really depends on your volume but either the Brother MFC-9970CDW like @Minion-Queen suggested, or the HP OfficeJet Pro X series. Both are rock solid.
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Plus 1 for Brother's inkjet MFC Pro series and the older printer only B&W laser printers.
I am tempted to pick the Brother Printer HL3075CW Wireless Color Printer for our business.
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@art_of_shred Same here, never good Lexmark experiences.
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It will be a VERY long time before I use a Brother printer again. I have had nothing but problems with them over the years. Received one at the beginning of this year and used it for 2 weeks before it was shelved. Just complete crap. Granted it was just a basic B&W laser.
I know a lot of people like them, but that has just been my personal experience.
In my home office I have a HP LaserJet Pro 300 color MFP (M375nw). I purchased it refurbed off ebay for $160. Prior to that, I used a Samsung CLP-315w for color laser printing and I had a REALLY old HP OfficeJet G55 that I used for scanning. The G55 died about 18 months ago and the Samsung finally needed a new drum ($70 + shipping) last month.
Decided to buy the HP instead of a drum since I really did need a scanner.
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I have had horrible experience with any basic line of printers. Always go with a business line. It solves all sorts of issues.
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@Minion-Queen Plus 1
And a tahnk you for helping me find that Brother Pro MFC inkjet for my client. They oooed and ahhhed over how much different it looked than a consumer product.
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@technobabble said:
@Minion-Queen Plus 1
And a tahnk you for helping me find that Brother Pro MFC inkjet for my client. They oooed and ahhhed over how much different it looked than a consumer product.
I am glad that it worked great for your client. I know I really like mine.
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@Minion-Queen said:
I have had horrible experience with any basic line of printers. Always go with a business line. It solves all sorts of issues.
Yeah, they are designed to be short-term solutions and completely disposable. Brother's basic b/w lasers are solid but don't hold up under heavy load. You buy an HL-2270DW and try printing to it like it's a HL-5450DN and I don't care if you replace the toners and drums as needed...it won't hold up. It's about picking the right tool for the job, and the low-end Brother lasers work but only for the smallest of businesses or when used for an individual user.
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Get managed print services. Best thing I've ever done for a company, saved money too.
You can negotiate for all services to be rendered by them, in advance (ie paper, toner, maintenance, replacements every __ months of the whole printer)
Typically you get the best top quality equipment for the lowest price and no more headaches (because now it's THEIR problem, it's an obvious advantage for them to use the best quality stuff)
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@MattSpeller said:
Get managed print services. Best thing I've ever done for a company, saved money too.
You can negotiate for all services to be rendered by them, in advance (ie paper, toner, maintenance, replacements every __ months of the whole printer)
Typically you get the best top quality equipment for the lowest price and no more headaches (because now it's THEIR problem, it's an obvious advantage for them to use the best quality stuff)
It's rarely cheaper than you can handle this inhouse, but the offload of work is often worth the extra cost.
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We already have our large printer/ copier as managed via Konica Minolta. Our rep suggested the KM bizhub c3350, out right to buy is $1700...
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@Dashrender said:
@MattSpeller said:
Get managed print services. Best thing I've ever done for a company, saved money too.
You can negotiate for all services to be rendered by them, in advance (ie paper, toner, maintenance, replacements every __ months of the whole printer)
Typically you get the best top quality equipment for the lowest price and no more headaches (because now it's THEIR problem, it's an obvious advantage for them to use the best quality stuff)
It's rarely cheaper than you can handle this inhouse, but the offload of work is often worth the extra cost.
Depends on how much time you spend and what you price out your time at. Also does not help when you're supporting freaking dinosaur-aged copiers. Certainly saved us a bunch when I did the math for the business case.