Author Topic: Comparing ink jet to laser printers  (Read 1097 times)

Offline krissel

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Comparing ink jet to laser printers
« on: February 09, 2011, 02:28:52 AM »
With the price of the latter getting lower, this article discusses whether the cost is justified to go laser.

http://arstechnica.com/business/news/2011/...tm_campaign=rss


I'm reminded of the time I printed some photos of the kids' work with our school's laser color printer and then watched in horror as they remelted when I tried to laminate them. rolleyes.gif  I turned the experience into a lesson for some classes on abstraction.  toothgrin.gif


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Offline Xairbusdriver

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Comparing ink jet to laser printers
« Reply #1 on: February 09, 2011, 05:39:59 PM »
Oh boy! Another attempt to make a meaningful comparison of what is one of the most subjective topics around. So many variables...almost limitless combinations...so few real facts... rolleyes.gif At least this "report" admits to being a "printing thought experiment." I find it a bit strange to compare such a cheap inkjet with practically anything else, but especially a $1,000+ laser. wacko.gif

We always print black & white documents on the laser, often in "toner saver" mode. Images are another matter, of course. Most laser printers have only about 16 shades of grey when using the black toner. Regardless of the "resolution." Finer particles can make the differentiation difficult to see, but it's still there, 'dithering' is all that's done.

Color lasers are probably constrained by the same lack of differentiation in shades, I have no knowledge of that, never seen a good laser color test page. I'm sure that multi-toner colors would be a benefit, just as they are with inkjets. Six color (plus black) ink carts are the minimum for higher quality prints, as far as I know. Generally, the higher the number of colors available, the better the color rendering. Probably be the same for lasers.

I think the laser printing speed will be limited by the amount of heat that can safely be supplied. Perhaps that may change when metallic 'papers' are used! rofl.gif Paper thickness is just as important in a laser as it is in inkjets, but for different reasons. It's that "heat" thing, again.

Hopefully, color laser technology will soon reach the same capabilities as inkjets...and new toner suppliers will emerge to supply reasonably priced toner as has happened in inkjets. I'm just not sure that the extremely fine toner will be as easily transferred and the liquids. Thinking.gif And, when it comes down to the costs or a page, the ink/toner is the one variable that the user can control quite easily, at least on the inkjet side.
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Offline Paddy

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Comparing ink jet to laser printers
« Reply #2 on: February 09, 2011, 06:35:04 PM »
The article barely touches on photo printing, so for home users, the entire article is a bit misleading. Laser printers still cannot do photos very well - and home users typically want to be able to print PHOTOS. It was a glaring omission in my books...

I have a B&W laser printer (Samsung) and a color inkjet all-in-one that are perfect for our family. Most of our printing is text on the laser, and if I get Canon brand inks for the inkjet, the laser is definitely cheaper on a per page basis. (I can almost even things out with the inkjet if I get 3rd party inks, which I often do, but I'd be going through cartridges a lot more often) It will depend a lot on the inkjet printer too - some have combined ink cartridges which raise the cost since you have to replace the whole thing even if only one color has run out.

http://www.articlesbase.com/hardware-artic...ing-728641.html has different numbers than Ars... more typical of my experience too.
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