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Choosing a high speed printer?
Good afternoon.
The task was to buy a high-speed network printer to replace the broken HP Laserjet 4515.
Its tasks will include printing once a month for 30 thousand sheets (within 1-2 days).
Requirements:
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From my own experience, I would still advise you to buy two printers, combine them into a pool, and it is better to entrust the charging of cartridges, with such volumes, to a separate office that will provide its own eco-cartridges and recharge. Then you do not need to buy new cartridges at all.
I had a situation with printing 10-15k sheets per day, there were 4 printers in the pool. When one failed, it was completely free to completely remove it from the pool and give it in for repairs. In critical peaks, two printers could pull out, that is, the situation "one is being repaired, the second is being recharged, two are printing" was much better than one very cool printer, but it broke down and everything stopped.
Unfortunately, I won’t recommend a model, but maybe it’s easier to contact a store convenient for you, announce the monthly and daily maximum, so that you can be advised of a solution of two printers?
The kiosers have good machines for 15-20 thousand with an automatic feeder, network ones. They refuel on their own stupidly by falling asleep toner. Well, if you want straight for sotes, then watch OKI, but I don’t see the point. It’s better to really make a pool, because. printers will fall off at such a load. Well, when buying, look at the warranty.
In the organization I work with, two Kyocera FS-3920DNs were used just about the same volume, rolled back <900,000 copies each (Resource 250,000 then maintenance kits). Now they have replaced it with Kyocera FS-4200DN, there are no complaints about the devices themselves, except that their drivers are obstinate, but in general their performance is, without exaggeration, monstrous.
You can get by with one printer, but HP, under your conditions, is the only option. With everyone else, you won't have the guarantee of uninterrupted printing for those 1-2 busy days.
As statistics show, about 70% of problems are solved by replacing the cartridge, provided that it is an "all in one" cartridge
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