Epson R1800?

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Archived from groups: comp.periphs.printers (More info?)

Now that the R1800's are shipping has anyone got is first hand
experience with one?

It is as good as it appears to be on paper?


*****************************************************

"Vietnam is what we had instead of happy childhoods."

Tim Page in
"Dispatches"
by Michael Herr
 
Archived from groups: comp.periphs.printers (More info?)

I saw one in action at Calumet Photo in Chicago.
I must say I was very impressed.
They were printing samples in color and monochrome.
the monochrome was done on Epson enhanced matte, and the color was either on
the premium luster or the premium semigloss. The output was as good as
anything I have seen in the past. It will be the next printer I own.

I know some people are saying that the r1800 doesn't do as good of a job on
matte as the 2200. I did not compare them side by side but have seen 2200
output before, and I feel the r1800 was as good or better. On gloss there is
no comparison, the r1800 is the best inkjet I have seen.

Cheers,
Paul

"John A. Stovall" <johnastovall@earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:gig351p59j21so9bb6eamb0cvggg21bcou@4ax.com...
> Now that the R1800's are shipping has anyone got is first hand
> experience with one?
>
> It is as good as it appears to be on paper?
>
>
> *****************************************************
>
> "Vietnam is what we had instead of happy childhoods."
>
> Tim Page in
> "Dispatches"
> by Michael Herr
 
Archived from groups: comp.periphs.printers (More info?)

Paul Bauer wrote:
> I saw one in action at Calumet Photo in Chicago.
> I must say I was very impressed.
> They were printing samples in color and monochrome.
> the monochrome was done on Epson enhanced matte, and the color was
either on
> the premium luster or the premium semigloss. The output was as good
as
> anything I have seen in the past. It will be the next printer I own.
>
> I know some people are saying that the r1800 doesn't do as good of a
job on
> matte as the 2200. I did not compare them side by side but have seen
2200
> output before, and I feel the r1800 was as good or better. On gloss
there is
> no comparison, the r1800 is the best inkjet I have seen.
>
> Cheers,
> Paul
>
> "John A. Stovall" <johnastovall@earthlink.net> wrote in message
> news:gig351p59j21so9bb6eamb0cvggg21bcou@4ax.com...
> > Now that the R1800's are shipping has anyone got is first hand
> > experience with one?
> >
> > It is as good as it appears to be on paper?
> >
> >
> > *****************************************************
> >
> > "Vietnam is what we had instead of happy childhoods."
> >
> > Tim Page in
> > "Dispatches"
> > by Michael Herr
 
Archived from groups: comp.periphs.printers (More info?)

Paul Bauer wrote:
> I saw one in action at Calumet Photo in Chicago.
> I must say I was very impressed.
> They were printing samples in color and monochrome.
> the monochrome was done on Epson enhanced matte, and the color was
either on
> the premium luster or the premium semigloss. The output was as good
as
> anything I have seen in the past. It will be the next printer I own.
>
> I know some people are saying that the r1800 doesn't do as good of a
job on
> matte as the 2200. I did not compare them side by side but have seen
2200
> output before, and I feel the r1800 was as good or better. On gloss
there is
> no comparison, the r1800 is the best inkjet I have seen.
>
> Cheers,
> Paul
>
> "John A. Stovall" <johnastovall@earthlink.net> wrote in message
> news:gig351p59j21so9bb6eamb0cvggg21bcou@4ax.com...
> > Now that the R1800's are shipping has anyone got is first hand
> > experience with one?
> >
> > It is as good as it appears to be on paper?
> >
>
I just tried it yesterday- printed a 13x19 glossy of a bright dawn snow
scene - 2DH w/ 2.8 AFS at nom. 28mm - this was handheld and it clearly
shows 1/16 " dia pachysandra branches approx 160' away against fresh
snow backdrop- wish I used a tripod!

Its quiet, its fast - and color seems great.
 
Archived from groups: comp.periphs.printers (More info?)

> "John A. Stovall" <johnastovall@earthlink.net> wrote in message
> news:gig351p59j21so9bb6eamb0cvggg21bcou@4ax.com...
> > Now that the R1800's are shipping has anyone got is first hand
> > experience with one?
> >
> > It is as good as it appears to be on paper?
> >
> >

I have been using the R1800 for a couple of weeks now and have not
been disappointed.

I did have a problem with banding, but it turned out to be my fault as
I was attempting to print on Epson's 'colorlife' paper using the semi
gloss profile. It seems that with so much technology built into the
print engine it really does use exactly the right amount of ink for
the characteristics of the paper, therefore if a paper is a little
less absorbent than the chosen profile, banding will occur.

I have also done quite a lot of monochrome printing now and the
results are exceptional, I take a lot of photographs of architectural
subjects and the R1800 output in B&W is stunning.
 
Archived from groups: comp.periphs.printers (More info?)

John What of the Bronzing problem, many say it is still a problem with the
1800. Have you seen this.

"John Worsfold" <jsw@in4systems.com> wrote in message
news:4832afda.0504251844.3b3195e2@posting.google.com...
> > "John A. Stovall" <johnastovall@earthlink.net> wrote in message
> > news:gig351p59j21so9bb6eamb0cvggg21bcou@4ax.com...
> > > Now that the R1800's are shipping has anyone got is first hand
> > > experience with one?
> > >
> > > It is as good as it appears to be on paper?
> > >
> > >
>
> I have been using the R1800 for a couple of weeks now and have not
> been disappointed.
>
> I did have a problem with banding, but it turned out to be my fault as
> I was attempting to print on Epson's 'colorlife' paper using the semi
> gloss profile. It seems that with so much technology built into the
> print engine it really does use exactly the right amount of ink for
> the characteristics of the paper, therefore if a paper is a little
> less absorbent than the chosen profile, banding will occur.
>
> I have also done quite a lot of monochrome printing now and the
> results are exceptional, I take a lot of photographs of architectural
> subjects and the R1800 output in B&W is stunning.
 
Archived from groups: comp.periphs.printers (More info?)

"Shooter" <photoman52003-shoot@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message news:<d4l741$pki$1@nwrdmz01.dmz.ncs.ea.ibs-infra.bt.com>...
> John What of the Bronzing problem, many say it is still a problem with the
> 1800. Have you seen this.
>
I have not seen this problem at all, I guess with something as
fundamental as this Epson would be unlikely to launch a new printer
without tackling it :>)
 
Archived from groups: comp.periphs.printers (More info?)

On Tue, 26 Apr 2005 11:02:25 +0000 (UTC), in comp.periphs.printers
"Shooter" <photoman52003-shoot@yahoo.co.uk> wrote:

>John What of the Bronzing problem, many say it is still a problem with the
>1800. Have you seen this.

I've had one print on my R800 which had issues, of the snowy egret seen
here:
http://edwardgruf.com/Digital_Photography/General/index.html

The shadow area below the bird was un-natrurally mottled on glossy paper,
but not matte.
----------
Ed Ruf Lifetime AMA# 344007 (Usenet@EdwardG.Ruf.com)
http://EdwardGRuf.com