Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Brother HL 2070N Laser Printer Review







The Brother HL-2070N is a fast, user-friendly network printer with basic, but efficient features. It's web based utility makes it easy to configure it from any network location. The only drawbacks are the lack of cables in the system, and the inconvienient PDF manual. The least of my worries was the somewhat noisy printing process. Other than that, printing the first page was quick, crisp, and simple. For at least my ethernet system, the printer driver needed to be installed in each of the computers using it. There was no built-in driver in XP.
The manual paper tray worked flawlessly, accepting paper as soon as the data was sent to the printer. This printer is well-suited to the home or small business with minimal printing needs!

Looking for quality, low cost Brother Laser toner and Drums?
Visit BrotherToners.com! http://www.brothertoners.com

Friday, July 07, 2006

Printer Error Fix

By Carl Smyth

Ever have blinking lights on your inkjet or laser printer that just will not go away? Ever install a new ink cartridge in your printer and it still thinks the old one is there? Well, instead of just getting angry at the printer or hunting around for your manual, you can try one simple thing: unplug it.

This technique has a few names that all mean the same thing: cycling the printer, resetting the printer or clearing the printer’s memory. Now unplugging your printer may seem like a low-tech solution to complex problems, and in reality it is. But, for problems like blinking error lights it is the only solution and also, it is typically the first one that will be recommended to you by a technician working for HP, Lexmark, Epson etc. They will recommend it right away if you install a new cartridge and it is registering as empty. If your printer isn’t registering it full, then that means it still thinks the old cartridge is in there and the memory needs to be cleared by unplugging it.

The first thing to remember about this solution is that unplugging the printer is not the same as turning the printer off. If you have error messages or cartridge communication problems, then turning off the printer is not going to do anything. It has to be physically unplugged from the wall or the back of the printer itself (you don’t have to unplug the printer from the computer). The second and most important thing is that the printer must be unplugged for at least one minute. It takes at least one minute for all the electricity to be cut off from the printer to allow it to completely reset and clear its memory. If you just unplug it for a few seconds, when it comes back on it is going to pick up right where it left off.

While this technique will not fix every problem, it is still a very quick and easy solution to a lot of annoying printer problems and it is always the best place to start when one of those problems arises.

Need quality Brother Toner with FREE shipping? BrotherToners.com is HERE!

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Brother HL-2040 review

Brother HL-2040


The Brother HL-2040 is an inexpensive, fast, noncolor laser printer for a home or sole-proprietor business. It's decent at printing text, so-so at graphics, and quick at both. As with the similarly priced Samsung ML-1740, what you see is what you get: a nonexpandable 250 sheets of paper capacity and 8MB of RAM.
On the plus side, the HL-2040 works with operating systems from Windows 95 through XP and with Macintosh OS 9.1, 9.2, OS X 10.2.4, or higher. It also has a speedy 96MHz processor, plus both a parallel and a USB 2.0 port. By contrast, the Samsung ML-1740 snubs Macs, and it sports a slower USB 1.1 port with only a 66MHz processor.

One of the smallest laser printers we've seen, the Brother HL-2040 is lightweight, with two-tone dark and light gray plastic making it more attractive than the traditional putty color scheme. It stands just 6.5 inches tall, 14.6 inches wide, and 14.2 inches deep and weighs less than 17 pounds loaded with toner and paper. Its main paper tray holds letter- or legal-size paper. You feed envelopes, card stock, transparencies, and label sheets one by one into the manual feed slot in front. On top, you'll find a 100-sheet output tray, tilted to hold the pages on top, next to the control panel.

Controls are ultrasimple: just a round, blue Go button and four LEDs labeled Toner, Drum, Paper, and Ready. The lights flash or glow red, yellow, and green and convey quite a bit of information, such as low toner warnings and error messages. Luckily, setting up the HL-2040 is easy. In the printed quick-setup guide, instructions are well laid out and easy to follow; there's also a user manual and a flash movie guide on CD-ROM.

Unfortunately, the HL-2040 ships with a starter toner cartridge rated to last a mere 1,500 text pages. You'll get an estimated 2,500 pages out of a regular, $60 toner cartridge, which brings the cost per page of text to 2.4 cents, about average for a modest laser printer.

The Brother HL-2040 lacks built-in networking capabilities. To push the envelope, you can buy external networking add-ons such as the $180 NC-2100p print server, or the $250 NC-2200W wireless print server. But to network, you'll save money going with the $199 Brother HL-2070N, which has 8MB of RAM more and comes with a built-in Ethernet card.

In CNET Labs' speed tests, the HL-2040 nimbly printed 16.5ppm (pages per minute) of text and was almost as fast at graphics, a mite over 16ppm--impressive numbers for a $150 laser and faster than the Samsung ML-1740.

The HL-2040's text prints were good in our tests, although more charcoal than black. Still, the letters were legible and sharp enough for everyday business documents, forms, and letters. Graphics, however, looked only fair; the printer failed to differentiate between dark shades of gray, which blended into black. The output also suffered from vertical banding in horizontal gradients, and a blotchy sheen showed up where pure black should have been.

The Brother HL-2040 comes with a standard one-year limited warranty on parts and labor. If your HL-2040 proves to be defective within one year from the date of purchase, Brother will replace it and pay the shipping costs. Toll-free technical support is available for the life of the printer--an impressive amount of time--Monday through Friday, from 9 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. ET.

More support options, including FAQs and forums for e-mailing or faxing technical questions to Brother, are available online.

This printer was tested at its default settings, which you can change to improve the results.

General
  • Depth
  • 14.2 in

  • Height
  • 6.5 in

  • Weight
  • 14.3 lbs

  • Compatibility
  • Linux, PC, Mac

  • Packaged quantity
  • 1

  • Width
  • 14.6 in

  • Max media size
  • A4 (8.25 in x 11.7 in), Legal (8.5 in x 14 in)

  • Printer output type
  • Monochrome

Copier

  • Copier Type
  • None

  • Copier Type:Type
  • None

Expansion / Connectivity

  • Expansion bay(s) total (free)
  • None

  • Expansion slot(s) total (free)
  • None

  • Bay provided type
  • None

  • Slot provided type
  • None

Printer

  • Max resolution (b&w)
  • 2400 dpi x 600 dpi

  • Technology / Printer Speed:Printer Speed
  • 20 pages/min

  • Printer output
  • 20 pages/min B/W

  • Printer Output:Output Quality
  • B/W

  • Max speed
  • 20 pages/min

  • Max Resolution ( B&W ):Max H-Resolution BW
  • 2400 dpi

  • Max Resolution ( B&W ):Max V-Resolution BW
  • 600 dpi

  • Connectivity technology
  • Wired

Media Handling

  • Media sizes
  • A4 (8.25 in x 11.7 in), A5 (5.83 in x 8.25 in), A6 (4.13 in x 5.83 in), B5 (6.93 in x 9.83 in), B6 (4.92 in x 6.93 in), Legal (8.5 in x 14 in), JIS B5 (7.17 in x 10.12 in), Executive (7.25 in x 10.5 in), Letter A Size (8.5 in x 11 in)

  • Max document size
  • 8.5 in (Legal) 14 in (Legal)

  • Envelope sizes
  • Com-10 (4.13 in x 9.5 in), International C5 (6.38 in x 9 in), International B5 (6.93 in x 9.83 in), International DL (4.33 in x 8.66 in)

  • Media Feeder(s)
  • 1 250 sheets Legal (8.5 in x 14 in) Autoload, 1 1 sheets Legal (8.5 in x 14 in) Manual load

  • Total media capacity
  • 250 sheets

  • Media type
  • Labels, Envelopes, Bond paper, Plain paper, Transparencies

Duty Cycle

  • Monthly Duty Cycle (Users Qty)
  • 10,000 - 19,999 pages

  • Monthly Duty Cycle
  • 10000 pages

Expansion / Port(s) Required

  • Port(s) / Connector(s) Required
  • 1 Parallel IEEE 1284 (EPP/ECP):4 pin USB Type B, 1 USB

  • Slot(s) Required
  • None

Software / System Requirements

  • Operating system
  • SuSe Linux, Debian Linux, Red Hat Linux, Linux Mandrake, Microsoft Windows XP, Apple MacOS 9.1 - 9.2.x, Apple MacOS X 10.2.4 or later, Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional, Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition, Microsoft Windows 98/98 Second Edition, Microsoft Windows 95 / NT Workstation 4.0

Memory / RAM

  • Memory / RAM Installed ( Max )
  • 8 MB : 8 MB

Networking

  • Networking
  • None

Power

  • Power Supply / Device
  • Power supply Internal

  • Operational power consumption
  • 450 Watt

  • Operational power consumption (standby)
  • 70 Watt

Environmental Parameters

  • Min operating temperature
  • 50 °F

  • Max operating temperature
  • 89.6 °F

  • Operating humidity range
  • 20 - 80%
Need Quality and low priced Brother Laser Toner? Visit www.Brothertoners.com!

Thursday, May 18, 2006

Buy an Inkjet or a Laser Printer?

Color inkjet printers have been fixtures in most small businesses for many years. They're cheap (under $60 in some cases), last a couple of years and everybody uses them. So they must be the perfect office tools, right? Maybe not.

When you do the math on printing, inkjets may well cost you a whole lot more than you realize.

"What the manufacturers of these printers don't fully explain to consumers is the true cost of ownership of a low-cost color printer," says Jeremy Shulman, vice president of Reink Technology in Tempe, Arizona, a maker of remanufactured ink cartridges under the Vibrantinkbrand name. "The general rule of thumb is that the cheaper the printer, the more expensive the disposable costs for refills and so on."

While the printers are almost given away, the refills bring in a fortune for the big-printer, original-equipment manufacturers (OEM). According to Lyra Research of Newton, Mass., the cartridge replacement market is now worth $21 billion annually. HP, for example, makes over $10 billion a year from ink cartridge sales, and Lexmark earns over $2 billion from ink supplies, more than half its total revenue.

Shulman gives the example of a Canon i320 Color Bubble Jet Printer. The cost for the hardware can be as little as $55, depending on discounts and where you buy it. The average cost of the ink from Canon is $19 but the yield from that, he says, is a measly 170 pages. Even if you print very little, the cost quickly adds up:

Seven pages a day times 300 days equals 2100 pages — an ink bill of $235.60 per year. If you own the printer for three years, the cost of cartridges comes to over $700 or about 13 times the original cost of the printer. For the Epson Stylus C62, Shulman concludes that the ink bill would be over $1000 for three year's worth of printing.

Of course, seven pages a day is a conservative estimate — some SMBs businesses print a lot more. Let's say your company prints 50 pages a day, 300 days a year. Using the above example, that equates to printing 15,000 pages annually. At that same rate, your annual ink cartridge bill would total $1,596.

And it isn't just cost that conspires against ink jets. They typically don't print pages as fast as laser printers. They can also be a major hassle. It is quite common to be inundated with cartridge-error messages when the cartridges are perfectly fine, or have the machine suddenly go crazy and spit out gobbledygook in an endless stream. The printers are also set up in a way that makes it difficult to minimize the amount of ink they use. It appears they're designed to make you use more ink than you need to with no way to default to "draft quality".

As a result of such factors, the market for laser printers is catching fire. According to Lyra Research, worldwide desktop monochrome (one-color) laser printer shipments grew 15 percent last year to 14.1 million units. More than half of those are what's known as Multi-Function Printers (MFP), which do print, fax, copy and scan. Lyra predicts that over 10 million MFPs will be in circulation by 2008.

Laser Printers by the Numbers
In comparison to ink jets, laser printers are quieter, faster and remarkably hassle free. But it's the math that makes them stand out. The numbers are as follows:

An HP laser printer with an estimated machine cost of $400, combined with a $115 toner cartridge, yields 8000 pages. Printing 40,000 pages costs you $400 plus $460 for the ink for a total of $860. A Brother 1440 laser printer works out at about $930 for the same number of pages. That comes to around two cents a page, or eight times less than an inkjet printer.


HP Color LaserJet 2600n
Click here for a larger image.

SpencerLab, a digital-color laboratory in Melville, New York, tested the HP LaserJet 1320 and the Dell 1700 Laser Printers. According to Catherine Fiasconaro, director of SpencerLab, even when you calculate the cost of the toner and the drum (which has to be replaced about every 20,000 pages), HP high-yield monochrome cartridges cost about two cents per print, with Dell costing slightly more.

Adding to the allure of the laser, printer prices are continuing to fall and the range of available products is steadily mounting. According to Trina Wolfgram, a marketing manager for HP, the HP Color LaserJet 2600n prints eight pages-per-minute, at 600 x 600 dots-per-inch (dpi) resolution. It has a recommended maximum monthly volume of 35,000 pages. Its estimated street price is $399.

If you don't require that much printing volume, the monochrome HP LaserJet 1020 — rated at a maximum monthly volume of 5,000 pages — prints up to 15 pages-per-minute and offers 600 x 600 dpi output. It has an estimated U.S. street price of $179.


HP LaserJet 1020
Click here for a larger image.

To bring the costs of laser printing down further, you can purchase inexpensive replacement or remanufactured ink cartridges.

"Replacement ink cartridges are cartridges that are manufactured by a company other than the original manufacturer," says Shulman. "A remanufactured ink cartridge is the original OEM cartridge that has been professionally cleaned, refilled with quality ink that is made in the USA and tested prior to leaving the factory."

With so much money being poured into ink cartridges, it's no surprise that hundreds of companies have sprung up offering refill kits for ink jets and replacement/remanufactured cartridges for ink jets and laser printers. They work for some people, but many find them too much trouble — most people have blackened their hands, injected the yellow ink into the red receptacle or ruined the carpet with refill kits.

Replacement cartridges, too, are catching on for ink jets and are widely available. But the success rate is sporadic to say the least. According to Recharger Magazine you simply cannot refill every inkjet cartridge. The actual numbers are more like 20 percent of black inkjet cartridges and 50 percent of colors can't be refilled or reused.

On the other hand, almost 99 percent of laser toner cartridges can be remanufactured to provide a product that meets or exceeds the OEM yield and quality. A handful of high-end companies produce "compatible" cartridges — products that equal of improve upon the quality of the big OEMs. At the low-end, a horde of remanufacturers offer refill kits and replacement toner cartridges at a fraction of the cost.

"HP own research revealed that 66 percent of people who try alternative cartridges never go back to the more expensive OEM models," said Gary Pendl, CEO of Pendl Companies, a Waukesha, Wisconsin-based manufacturer of high-quality compatible toner cartridges for HP, Apple, Panasonic, Tektronix, Epson, Lexmark, IBM and Canon printers.

Pendl guarantees its cartridges will perform equal to or better than OEM cartridges or it will either replace the cartridge or offer a full refund. The guarantee covers not only the cartridge but also the printer. The quality matches or exceeds OEM standards, with a defect rate of less than one percent on toner cartridges. The OEM defect rate is one percent.

Reink Shulman quotes similar figures for his company's products. In terms of cost, the HP cartridge for a LaserJet 1010 costs around $70 and has a yield of 2,000 pages. Reink remanufactures it with the same 2,000-page yield and sells it for $55. It also makes a longer-life version with a yield of 3,600 pages at $85.

Other suppliers offer less in terms of quality (and perhaps yield) but at a lower cost for toner. For a Brother 6800 MFP, for instance, we bought six toner cartridges from 4inkjets.com for $48 and they worked out fine. A single cartridge purchased direct from Brother cost $33.99. We noticed no real difference in quality.

That said, you should realize that not all replacement and remanufactured products are created equal.

"Usually going with the cheapest is not the best idea," says Shulman. "Many companies don't even test their cartridges before they are sent out."

HP Wolfgram counters the replacement/remanufactured cartridge point of view saying that HP designs its laser printing supplies to provide maximum value by going beyond yield and estimated cost per page calculations.

"HP develops supplies that offer real value in total cost of ownership by focusing on yield and cost per page, as well as usability, quality and reliability," said Wolfgram. "By offering supplies that address all these concerns, small businesses are assured that can save time and money with HP supplies."

Paperless Society on Hold
In the late nineties, visionaries promised a paperless society due to the digital age. How wrong they were. In North America alone, office printers churn out 1.2 trillion sheets in one year. Thus the demand for printer ink is higher than ever. So it makes good business sense to take ink costs into account when you decide what printer to buy.

If you print very little, stick to your inkjet or replace it with a more modern model. But if you print consistently in a reasonable volume, it is probably time to take a serious look at a laser printer. HP, Lexmark, Brother, Dell and others offer a wealth of choices. Cheap replacement cartridges are probably good enough if your printing volume and company size aren't that big. But if you spend a lot on printers and printing, remanufactured cartridges give you wonderful quality and peace of mind for less than OEM cartridges.

What about color lasers? These used to be very expensive, and recently the price has dropped considerably. Lyra Research notes that 1.85 million color laser printers were sold last year, a growth of 47 percent over the previous year.

"A growing number of offices are replacing existing monochrome laser machines with color page printers," says Ann Priede, an editor at Lyra Research.

Shulman suggests leaving color lasers alone, however, unless you need to print a high volume of brochures and flyers. Reason: color lasers are expensive to buy and color and black toner costs more. So unless you really need a steady stream of color promotional materials, stick to a monochrome laser.

And what about your occasional color printing needs? Keep one or two of your old ink jets around for those occasions when you need a splash of color.

"For small amounts of color printing it's much cheaper to use an inkjet," said Shulman. "If a business plans on printing a large amount of color it may be worthwhile to buy a color laser printer."

Need Brother Laser Toner? Buy Cheap now and Get FREE SHIPPING - HERE

Monday, February 13, 2006

Laser Printers better than inkjets?

The distance between inkjet and laser printers has lessened considerably, to the point where it is sometimes difficult to decide between the two. Most individuals will continue to go with inkjets -- they are still less expensive, and nearly all of them are color-capable. In addition, the quality of text that inkjets now product means that a small or home business can use one without fearing that documents will look cheap or unclear.

But while laser printers are still, for the most part, confined to black printing -- there are more and more color lasers out there, but their cost is still prohibitive for individuals and small businesses -- they do produce high quality text at much faster speeds.

Which to choose? Check out some articles on laser printers and inkjet printers. And soon, we hope to offer a questionaire that will help. Meanwhile, keep the above factors in mind when looking for a new printers.