T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
5226.1 | | TFH::KIRK | a simple song | Thu Nov 21 1991 15:39 | 11 |
| I saw one, too. Nice, 300 dpi plain paper, but one hitch was that you either
get b/w .XOR. color, ya gotta swap ink cartridges! (color mode *will* print
black, but it takes 3 times the ink, 1 part yellow, 1 part magenta, 1 part
cyan...)
Does envelops, all for something under $800. I think I'll wait, but it was
tempting.
Cheers,
Jim
|
5226.2 | | TERSE::ROBINSON | | Thu Nov 21 1991 17:10 | 12 |
| >(color mode *will* print
>black, but it takes 3 times the ink, 1 part yellow, 1 part magenta, 1 part
>cyan...)
Which is not really the same as black. I've heard is is kind of a dark green.
Note that the HP Paint Jet does have black, but does not have the resolution
of the 500c. I haven't seen printouts, but I think leaving out black
was a poor decision in what is otherwise an improvement over the Paint Jet.
Paint Jets seem to have taken a $300 price drop recently...
Dave
|
5226.3 | faster, better, cheaper, and I want it NOW! .-) | TFH::KIRK | a simple song | Fri Nov 22 1991 10:57 | 21 |
| re: Note 5226.2
Dave,
>Which is not really the same as black. I've heard is is kind of a dark green.
Yeah, I probably should have put black in "quotes". I examined the output
with a x50 microscope, dark greyish green, with a halo of the primary colors
around it. (Hey, a printer that automatically simulates HAM fringing!)
Still, the output looked pretty good from a foot or so away.
I like my PaintJet XL, but sometimes the 180 dpi seems a little coarse.
Does anyone know why HP couldn't reformulate their ink or something so
PaintJets could handle plain paper better? Seems like a simple and cheap
upgrade...just change the ink cartridges. (Perhaps they or some other party
already have?)
Cheers,
Jim
|
5226.4 | | RGB::ROSE | | Fri Nov 22 1991 13:12 | 7 |
| >Does anyone know why HP couldn't reformulate their ink or something so
>PaintJets could handle plain paper better? Seems like a simple and cheap
>upgrade...just change the ink cartridges. (Perhaps they or some other party
>already have?)
Kodak has done just that with their Diconix printers. The solution
exists. I wonder if the cartridges are compatible?
|