Nill Toulme
New member
... from the good folks at InkJet Art:
http://www.inkjetart.com/news/archive/IJN_09-26-06.html
Nill
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www.toulme.net
http://www.inkjetart.com/news/archive/IJN_09-26-06.html
Nill
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www.toulme.net
Nill Toulme said:
Nill Toulme said:????... My 4800 came with full cartridges.
17 x 22 is fairly common, but 17" rolls are very rare. My fav (Arches) also comes in 34x47 sheets which would quarter into 17x23.5 and would print 15x22.5 if the printer allowed.Nill Toulme said:Probably because it doesn't do roll, only sheets... is there such a thing as 24" sheet paper? I *think* I've only seen 17x22 (which always struck me as strange).
Yes it's always baffled me that Epson's papers come in 16" rolls rather than 17". Happily I settled on InkJet Art's Micro Ceramic Luster as my standard paper, and it comes in nice 17" x 100' rolls.Don Lashier said:17 x 22 is fairly common, but 17" rolls are very rare. My fav (Arches) also comes in 34x47 sheets which would quarter into 17x23.5 and would print 15x22.5 if the printer allowed.
Not so, I frequently print at 16x24. I think there might be some nominal limitation at 44", but Qimage will work around that too for murals.IIRC the 4800 is also limited to 21" despite accepting rolls. Is this an actual limitation or just marketing mumbo?
Nill Toulme said:Not so, I frequently print at 16x24. I think there might be some nominal limitation at 44", but Qimage will work around that too for murals.
if you were rearranging your workspace, consider making (or getting a local chippy to make) a simple raised stand, on drawer runners, say, for the printer, so it could slide over the top of the scanner when needed to print straight feed, or back in normal use/to use the scanner.If the 3800 accepts paper from the front and doesn't extend it out the back, then I might be able to use it without significantly rearranging my working space (and putting a printer where I'd planned to put a scanner).
If the 3800 accepts paper from the front and doesn't extend it out the back, then I might be able to use it without significantly rearranging my working space (and putting a printer where I'd planned to put a scanner).
Ray West said:if you were rearranging your workspace, consider making (or getting a local chippy to make) a simple raised stand, on drawer runners, say, for the printer, so it could slide over the top of the scanner when needed to print straight feed, or back in normal use/to use the scanner.
Nill Toulme said:My 4800 is on a less than perfectly rigid stand and moves noticeably when printing. It doesn't seem to affect print quality at all.
Nill
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www.toulme.net
Some at LL inquired directly of Epson and the response was from the rear manual feed or standard sheet feed setting, up to 37 inches, front manaul feed setting - up to 24 inches. Good enough for me.Jack_Flesher said:I suspect that the 3800 will allow for "custom" paper sizes just like all of the other Epson's. If so, it should not be difficult to pre-cut 16" or 17"x whatever" sheets from a 16" or 17" wide roll and feed them into the 3800 as a single sheet...
So... has anyone out there gotten a 3800 and had it long enough to form in-depth opinions? I know there have been a lot of other printers since it came out, but it still seems very interesting. Everyone just stopped talking about it when the competition came out.
Ken, is therte any practical restriction on papaer length and weight?
Asher