Thank you for taking the time to make this! On average, what is the cost of ink? Also, do you happen to know what the max paper thickness this printer will work with?
The printer is awesome thanks for the recommendation, I recommend buying the factory stand/cart for it, it will catch all the prints or you can simply roll it over to a table and they'll slide right out onto the table.
It really is a good printer. Make sure you print something at least once a week or 2 to make sure it doesn't clog, and get the protection, its worth it.
Good review, any updates on the printer like changes in (if any) performance, quality etc...? now that you have used it for a few months would it be worth going to the t3170 (prices are wildly all over the place), did you consider other brands and models. Any Input is greatly appreciated, thanks.
This turned out to be a very good printer, prints very nice from my phone and tablet but not so much from my PC, it prints 8x11 instead of the 24x36. Did you have that problem? In any case it’s very good, glad I can print in the correct size from my smart devices.
@@hitek7292 yes I had that issue when I first looked at it. Go into print properties and select properties, then click on "custom paper size" then " user defined" then "us-arch" then 24x36. Always click print preview!
No aftermarket ink that i've found. It's almost not worth risking it on a printer like this. Make sure it doesn't sit for more then a few weeks without printing something. Ink needs to stay clear in the heads. Also get an extended warranty. Well work it!
FYI: Actual "Blueprints" have a dark blue background (blue ferric ferrocyanide) with white lines. They were produced via light exposure of specially coated papers and developed via a chemical process . You may not be old enough to have ever seen a real 'blue print'. Then came 'Whiteprints" that had a white background with blue lines produced via the diazo process. You may be printing large format drawings but what you are producing are color (or gray scale) prints ... NOT BLUE PRINTS.
Thank you for taking the time to make this! On average, what is the cost of ink? Also, do you happen to know what the max paper thickness this printer will work with?
The printer is awesome thanks for the recommendation, I recommend buying the factory stand/cart for it, it will catch all the prints or you can simply roll it over to a table and they'll slide right out onto the table.
Using it today actually
perfect review thanks. Starting a home office cad service so this will work perfectly to get started.
It really is a good printer. Make sure you print something at least once a week or 2 to make sure it doesn't clog, and get the protection, its worth it.
Hi, thanks for the video. Why cannot i find this model on the epson website? There is only the T2100 wich looks very similar.
Few yeasts old. Try my Amazon libk
Good review, any updates on the printer like changes in (if any) performance, quality etc...? now that you have used it for a few months would it be worth going to the t3170 (prices are wildly all over the place), did you consider other brands and models. Any Input is greatly appreciated, thanks.
Its a.great beginer to mid range printer. God for about 4 to 10 sets a month. Beats the time and money going to the printer.
This turned out to be a very good printer, prints very nice from my phone and tablet but not so much from my PC, it prints 8x11 instead of the 24x36. Did you have that problem? In any case it’s very good, glad I can print in the correct size from my smart devices.
@@hitek7292 yes I had that issue when I first looked at it. Go into print properties and select properties, then click on "custom paper size" then " user defined" then "us-arch" then 24x36. Always click print preview!
Exactly what i was looking for! Thx!
Awesome! It's a great printer.
How is the colors??? Is it good for posters????
Colors are great but uses a lot of ink
How do it compare to the hp t210???
Can you send me some examples of poster prints
That’s the difference between the 2170 and the 3170????
I don't know I don't have the Hp.
Can i print vynil for shirts with this printer ??
No unfortunately, just paper upto 24"
The video is informative. Do you know if it will print 12x18?
I don't know if I e heard of that size? It goes to 24" wide so most likely if it's a "standard" paper size. Check the website.
You would need to manually load each sheet. The 50 sheet auto feeder only handles 11 x 17. Or double wide print on the 24" roll and cut manually.
Can you please do a poster review a lot of people would love to a poster video
How can I refill ink cartridge cheap
No aftermarket ink that i've found. It's almost not worth risking it on a printer like this. Make sure it doesn't sit for more then a few weeks without printing something. Ink needs to stay clear in the heads. Also get an extended warranty. Well work it!
It should do ok printing on clear film for screen printing right?
I have no idea we only use it for blueprints?
Just checked with customer service it does print on clear film
Will it print on positive film paper ?
Don't think so
Can you use it for gloss paper? Like to make a poster?
Not sure to be homest
Can it be used to print photos all sizes?A3 and A1 and which ink does the machine use
I would check the website for tech info. It's now 2 years old so I. Sure new ones are out.
Can this be converted to sublimation
No only paper
Please compare this with HP T250 plotter.
I don't have an HP to compare it to sorry
is the t40 ink also sublimation ink?
Not sure. Check Epson website.
Nope.
Can u print banners?
Not with this model.
@@The360Electrician Thank u
Ms. Porter yes you can print banners use the heavy weight polyester for banners.
@@The360Electrician then what printer is used for banners also for blue print and its cost
This is stricktly for blueprints, you could do banners but ink would be expensive.
Hi, can this printer do letter sizes also? or does it only do rolls?
Yes im pretty sure it can,but why would you use it for that. Ink is expensive.
😀
Thank you!
Again thank you
FYI: Actual "Blueprints" have a dark blue background (blue ferric ferrocyanide) with white lines. They were produced via light exposure of specially coated papers and developed via a chemical process . You may not be old enough to have ever seen a real 'blue print'. Then came 'Whiteprints" that had a white background with blue lines produced via the diazo process. You may be printing large format drawings but what you are producing are color (or gray scale) prints ... NOT BLUE PRINTS.
Hey Lewis thanks for your input.
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