I have sometimes wondered about the constant churning out of new machines and models to feed the bottom line and am also aware that 'newer' doesn't always mean better.
Have you ever come across a digital printer that was fantastic to use and created great copies and was ALSO easy to maintain but is no longer made? I am curious about this question as the only experience I have had with an office size printer is the Konica Minolta bizhub C253 with three paper draws, and a collating mechanism on the left.
I purchased the used C253 because of a project I was doing. I was hand making 7 books (540 pages each) and I calculated that if I went to a Kinko Copy type place it would cost me much, much more than buying an office printer and doing it myself. The size of paper I was going to be using was 11" x 17". This printer was the one I purchased and I was amazed by the print quality, though I had not tested other printers. This was one of the least expensive in the place where I got it. But I did end up spending $350 within a of couple days on getting the manual tray rollers changed, since at that time I was not confident enough to fix the paper jam issue that caused me to get a technician out to service the machine. Having watched him do the service I was confident in doing any servicing in the future myself, which is what I did in the last few days when I changed the feed rollers for trays 1, 2 and 3.
It would be interesting to see what responses I get, if any to this question.
As a side note, one of the things I get distressed over (if that is the correct term) is the 'throwing away or discarding of' perfectly usable tech. There has been a lot of time and energy expended in making these products produce excellent results and they are built with intensity of purpose (which gets distilled into the material of the machine itself) and I believe it is so wrong to discard perfectly good working machines.
So when companies stop manufacturing rollers for older machines they invariably get harder to fix due to lack of new parts and sources. My philosophy is why get rid of older tech just because the companies stopped 'supporting' them?
I also find that new stuff is not built to the standards as 'older' tech is. Cheaper materials, cheaper factories (China, India, Vietnam, etc). My C253 is made in Japan, which I'm very pleased about.
Anyway, please share what you can.
Have you ever come across a digital printer that was fantastic to use and created great copies and was ALSO easy to maintain but is no longer made? I am curious about this question as the only experience I have had with an office size printer is the Konica Minolta bizhub C253 with three paper draws, and a collating mechanism on the left.
I purchased the used C253 because of a project I was doing. I was hand making 7 books (540 pages each) and I calculated that if I went to a Kinko Copy type place it would cost me much, much more than buying an office printer and doing it myself. The size of paper I was going to be using was 11" x 17". This printer was the one I purchased and I was amazed by the print quality, though I had not tested other printers. This was one of the least expensive in the place where I got it. But I did end up spending $350 within a of couple days on getting the manual tray rollers changed, since at that time I was not confident enough to fix the paper jam issue that caused me to get a technician out to service the machine. Having watched him do the service I was confident in doing any servicing in the future myself, which is what I did in the last few days when I changed the feed rollers for trays 1, 2 and 3.
It would be interesting to see what responses I get, if any to this question.
As a side note, one of the things I get distressed over (if that is the correct term) is the 'throwing away or discarding of' perfectly usable tech. There has been a lot of time and energy expended in making these products produce excellent results and they are built with intensity of purpose (which gets distilled into the material of the machine itself) and I believe it is so wrong to discard perfectly good working machines.
So when companies stop manufacturing rollers for older machines they invariably get harder to fix due to lack of new parts and sources. My philosophy is why get rid of older tech just because the companies stopped 'supporting' them?
I also find that new stuff is not built to the standards as 'older' tech is. Cheaper materials, cheaper factories (China, India, Vietnam, etc). My C253 is made in Japan, which I'm very pleased about.
Anyway, please share what you can.
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