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#1
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![]() After several days of frustrations, I would appreciate your help.
I recently got a new consulting client, a mortgage broker. As part of the service, I offered to mail his leads. I want to use a postcard with merged names and addresses. Since my old inkjet printer is about done, I thought I'd grab a laser. That's when my troubles began. Printing on card stock, the laser rolls the paper through putting a curve in the paper that just doesn't want to come out. Then when I try to print the opposite side, it won't pick up the paper. I have tried 2 different printers in the last 2 days and fought constant jams and other problems. Since budget is a consideration, here is what I tried. Samsung CLP 300 and HP Color Laser Jet 1600. The Samsung was fast but created the worst curl. The HP had trouble picking up the card stock even with the initial print before curl. As I type this, I'm trying out a cheap Epson inkjet. Surprisingly, I think this will work for now. But, I'd like to be able to expand my services to do more desktop publishing for my clients. Perhaps brochures, newsletters... Even though this cheap inkjet may solve my immediate problem, I'm looking for a longer solution. Thanks, as always. Larry Foster |
#2
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![]() Larry,
I had the same problem a few years ago and ended up buying a postcard printer. A dedicated machine made just for that purpose worked really slick. There are a few of them out there. Today I find that the easiest and cheapest way is to not print them at all. It makes no sense to print them yourself when the USPS is willing to do all the work for you.... http://www.usps.com/netpost/sendregu...egularbusiness Jim |
#3
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![]() Hi, Larry,
I tried every machine available locally when my old Canon inkjet finally bit the dust after many years of hard use. Super machine would print on danged near anything. Customer service was excellent. A new Canon was not cost effective at that time. My experience with HPs (several models) were a bad joke...constant jams no matter what and extremely difficult to unjam. Epson worked okay but not good for high volume use as it has too many plastic critical parts. Lexmarks were all over the place...some problematic and a couple really great ones. Lee uses a Lexmark X3350 and loves it. Lexmarks are not known for their longevity (by reputation but not our experience) but they're certainly consumer friendly price-wise for both machine and inks. If you go that route, do get the high capacity tanks as they last far longer than they claim and work great...for not much more than the standard tanks. I finally got a Brother MFC and love it. No problems at all no matter what I try with it. Hardest problem with the machine was the setup with our phone system for the fax etc. All the machines I tried were inkjets as the lasers are not good for asthmatics and, from recent reports, for anyone else either health-wise. Hope this helps. Sandi Bowman Last edited by Sandi Bowman : August 12, 2007 at 11:07 AM. Reason: redundancy |
#4
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![]() Larry,
Here's a Great resource that reads Consumer reports and other magazines for me without the membership... ![]() And of course, there are all kinds of business ideas & possibilities in Reviews and Summaries... ![]() Good Quick reviews & summaries... http://www.consumersearch.com/ http://www.consumersearch.com/www/computers/index.html Phil Last edited by Phil : August 12, 2007 at 04:21 PM. Reason: additional info |
#5
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![]() Thanks everyone for the great feedback.
James, the reason I can't use USPS.com is the client wants the postcard livestamped. Not sure why. Sandy, is the Brother you're using an inkjet? I always liked my Brother MFC which was 2 printers back. What I ended up getting was an Epson R260 Photo printer. But it's an ink hog. Staples gives a 14 day trial, so I may get an opportunity to try a few more. Phil, I'll be checking the resources you gave. Thanks again. Larry |
#6
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![]() The Brother MFC is a model 420CN inkjet. Office Depot runs catalog specials on the ink rather frequently so you could save some money by subscribing to their free catalog and updates. Staples also runs specials occasionally on the inks.
Sandi Bowman |
#7
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![]() Thanks Sandy.
I think my problem is specifically related to card stock because or rigidity. I really enjoyed my Brother (as much as you can enjoy a printer). I'll definitely check it out. After posting, I did a little surfing and it seems that serious desktop publishers have several printers for differnt jobs. I've had my eyes on a large format for some time because I've been kicking around a print weekly. Print on 11X17 stock and fold in half. Larry |
#8
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![]() Larry,
The card needs to stay flat when printing. If it bends when heated, it will stay that way. You're going to run into that bending with whatever printer you try unless you get a postcard printer that is specifically designed for just that purpose. I bought a postcard printer around 7 years ago that worked really slick but I haven't seen them advertised anywhere for quite awhile. But why even bother with doing them yourself when it's so cheap to order high quality cards online. http://www.vistaprint.com/vp/ns/spla...9%3A06%3A25+PM Jim |
#9
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![]() Hi, James.
One reason to do them in house was the turn around time. I got this list on Wednesday and if I didn't have so many printer problems, should have mailed Friday. They will mail tomorrow. I only got final approval for the copy on Thursday I did a search for "post card printer" on Staples and came up empty. What brand do you have? |
#10
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![]() Larry:
Check out sendoutcards.com * Can merge names and addresses on postcards. * They have live stamps. * You can schedule when the postcards go out. Could get a bit expensive if you have to mail a lot of post cards out. But they do have bulk discounts. Well worth checking them out and outsourcing the mailing to someone else. |
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