Archived from groups: comp.periphs.printers (
More info?)
I'm not sure I understand the comment below.
Price per unit, especially for black printing, is cheaper with laser
than inkjet, unless you are considering self-refilling.
As stated by others, the yield of the cartridges vary.
Watch out for "starter cartridges". Some printers come with a cartridge
which is only 1/2 or 1/3rd filled with toner, and will only produce that
same fraction of prints. Also, keep in mind that most yields for black
prints are given in terms of a 5% coverage. That is a short letter in
standard font, with no or minimal letterhead. In the real world, a
letter is probably closer to 8-10% coverage or more.
You can figure out costs per print by looking at the cost of the
cartridge and dividing it by the number of copies at the 5% yield, if
your letters are more like 10% coverage, double the cost per print, and
so on.
Also consider other consumables, if there are any (fuser oil, drums,
etc). Today, most laser printers have a one piece cartridge which is
self contained and includes the drum. Some of these unit can have the
toner refilled a number of times before the drum is requiring changing.
Art
pete wrote:
> On Sun, 05 Dec 2004 17:03:19 GMT, "Shemp" <noemail@nospam.com> wrote:
>
>
>>I'm considering a laser printer for home use.
>>
>>My biggest concern is cartridge life because they are more expensive then
>>inkjet. Can anyone tell me how long one should last and also any
>>recommentations on a good mid-range laster printer?
>>
>
> If you are worried about toner cartridge life, you'd better get yourself an
> inkjet printer.