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Fuser, toner dust, preHeat current, recycling ship back, replacement cardridge, … vs.
a 9 US$/6000 pages black pigment ink bottle and a 7 US$ maintenance kit every 2-3 bottles. Epson dropped it‘s laser printer production for ecological AND economical reasons.
- NET: FTTH, OPNsense, 10G backbone, GWN APs, ipPBX
- SRV: 12 RU HA server cluster, 0.1 PB storage on premise
- IoT: thread, zigbee, tasmota, BidCoS, LoRa, WX suite, IR
- 3D: two 3D printers, 3D scanner, CNC router, laser cutter
xpd:
Reminds me... our Brother 7065DN has a dying fuser... probably cheaper to buy new printer :) Otherwise the thing has been running for 10 years with just replacement toner/drums.
My HP replaces the drum with the toner, as the drum appears to be built into the replaceable toner unit. So never had any issues with drums with all the HP printers I have purchased.
Another vote for the Brother Laser HL-2375DW. Brilliant wee printer
Unfortunately, he asked for a b/w inkjet printer.
I was faced with the same question and yes, there are cheap (even used, professional) laser printers. In the end, I opted for a more modern, environmentally friendly solution and have not regretted it. If you just want a Windows PC standalone printer with tank technology, these models are cheaper (ET-M1120 for 155€) compared to my PCL office network printer with print server above. And this is not too far from his budget.
- NET: FTTH, OPNsense, 10G backbone, GWN APs, ipPBX
- SRV: 12 RU HA server cluster, 0.1 PB storage on premise
- IoT: thread, zigbee, tasmota, BidCoS, LoRa, WX suite, IR
- 3D: two 3D printers, 3D scanner, CNC router, laser cutter
Thanks folks
I wasn't sure of the terminology to use, looks like "Mono Laser" is now added to my vocabulary
Will avoid HP, and most likely get a Brother of some description
mattwnz:
xpd:
Reminds me... our Brother 7065DN has a dying fuser... probably cheaper to buy new printer :) Otherwise the thing has been running for 10 years with just replacement toner/drums.
My HP replaces the drum with the toner, as the drum appears to be built into the replaceable toner unit. So never had any issues with drums with all the HP printers I have purchased.
Its good to have separate drum kit to save on costs especially with the Brother printers since its easy to reset the drum kit counter and wait till the prints starts to show imperfections then replace it. For mono lasers you can recycle the drum kit to save costs and buy an opc drum cylinder kit on Ebay for around $20 its easy enough and saves a bit of money.
I have the Brother Laser HL-2375DW.
I haven’t needed to replace original toner yet but will soon need to I think.
Where do people find best place to buy replacement toner for good quality at fair price?
Do you buy Brother or are third party brands just as good
Thanks in advance for any suggestions.
We tried third party toner in our own office printers (one HP and two Brother) on three occasions over 5 years and each time was disappointed. One resulted in a damaged drum that was only a month old. 🤬
Since then we've stuck with genuine toners, which give the benefit of extending the warranty our to 4 years. Particularly for business clients, the benefit of the warranty generally outweighs the cost savings of cheap toner.
“Don't believe anything you read on the net. Except this. Well, including this, I suppose.” Douglas Adams
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PocketSmith for budgeting and personal finance management. A great Kiwi company.
Would relectantly agree with that too. Had a great colour laser Brother printer a few years ago from a PB Tech deal, but the first set of 3rd party replacement toners wrecked the drum.
Spend a bit extra. Get a Brother laser.
I got an HP Officejet Pro 6960 and I have just had issues to no end. Scanner on it is great, but the brother just works.
I put a clone toner in my brother and it was clearly not printing well and transferring far too much toner to the paper. It would often not fuse to the paper and be able to be picked off as a thick piece of black. For the price and the little amount of printing that I did I just threw it out and put a real brother one back in and it gradually returned to normal printing over the next few weeks.
Tinkerisk:
Unfortunately, he asked for a b/w inkjet printer.
I was faced with the same question and yes, there are cheap (even used, professional) laser printers. In the end, I opted for a more modern, environmentally friendly solution and have not regretted it. If you just want a Windows PC standalone printer with tank technology, these models are cheaper (ET-M1120 for 155€) compared to my PCL office network printer with print server above. And this is not too far from his budget.
No he didn't. He asked for a printer that only used B&W ink and the intent of the question - not to have to buy colour ink - was clear to most readers.
And the cost comparison with your office printer is irrelevant; there have already been several posts recommending great consumer-grade lasers for prices comparable to an inkjet. The printer you linked to is significantly more expensive and, unlike the recommended laser, doesn't have duplex - you'll need to spend around $700 for the next model up for that. Lastly, the ink bottles are $30 here so while cheaper than the liquid gold normally used, still not negligible.
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