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The questions you should ask yourself before making a decision on the best printer for your usage.

 

There are many features and options available to you when buying a new printer, that if answered correctly, should enable you to buy the most suitable printer to your needs. And not necessarily the most expensive.

So ask yourself these questions:

  • What category of printer is required? There are three categories to chose from:

                 1) General Purpose or Special Purpose – The vast majority of printers on the market are general purpose (they are good for doing a little bit of everything). Special purpose printers are designed to do specificthings (photo printing, document printing, label printing). Figure out what purpose you need your printer to serve.

                2) Home Use or Office Use – Where will you be using your printer? Home use printers are more likely to print photos. Office users will focus on printing text. Maybe you are a home office user. If so, get multifunction printer.

                3) Laser Printer or Inkjet Printer -  Laser printers are designed for text heavy printing. Inkjet printers are better for photos and graphics. What you print will determine what you need.

 

  •   Do you need to print in color?                                                                                                   If the answer is yes, you are probably leaning toward an inkjet printer. If you answer no, then find yourself a laser printer.

  •  Do you need a single function or multifunction printer  (MFC or MFP)?                                  If all you want to do is print, go with a single function printer. If you would like the option to make copies, scan documents/images and fax, you are going to need a multifunction printer.                                                                                                                                                                                      

  • What kind of print quality do you need?                                                                               Print quality differs by the type of printer. Check the print quality for text, graphics, and photos separately. Just because a printer prints high quality text does not mean it will print high quality graphics and photos. Find a printer that produces high quality results for what you print.

     

  • How much speed do you need?                                                                                                 If you are the sole user and you typically print 1-2 pages at a time, you probably don’t need a printer with a lot of speed. If you are printing individual documents with many pages, or share the printer with a number of people, you are going to want a printer with a high print speed.

  • How much do you print?                                                                                                             Make sure you check the printer’s monthly duty cycle.The duty cycle the manufacturers recommended number of pages you should print each month. Each printer has a different duty cycle. Printing in excess of this number may cause your printer to wear out faster.

  • How are you going to connect?                                                                                                 In addition to USB ports, most printers now allow you to connect via an Ethernet connection or Wireless connection. The advantage of Ethernet and Wireless is that they allow you to add your printer to your home network. You can link all your computers to a single printer. 

 

  •  How much does it cost?                                                                                                              Be sure to check the total cost of ownership for any printer you are thinking about purchasing. You’ll pay a certain amount for the printer when you buy it, but remember you are going to need to buy cartridges in order to continue to use it. To get the total cost of ownership, calculate the cost per year for each kind of output (monochrome, color document, photo) by multiplying the cost per page for that kind of output by the number of those pages you print per year. Add the three amounts together to get the total cost per year. Then multiply that by the number of years you expect to own the printer, and add the initial cost of the printer. Compare the total cost of ownership figures between printers to find out which printer will be cheapest in the long run. More on this at InksupplyGuy.

    Additional information on what printer to get can be seen on a video from PC World

     

     

    FOR OTHER BLOG ARTICLES FROM ABC PRINT SUPPLIES, CLICK HERE

 

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TIME TO REPLACE YOUR PRINTER - WHAT TYPE SHOULD YOU BUY

    The questions you should ask yourself before making a decision on the best printer for your usage.   There are many features and opti...
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25 June 2012
 

Reviews

I’ve just been contacted by support – such quick service!! After significant button pressing, the cartridge is working (we just needed to help the printer along in recognising it).

Thank you both for your assistance. Very impressed and very relieved!