Fred R.
Established
What all do you folks recommend for 14" b/w printers? b/w inks?
Not to contradict your findings but I’ve owned 3 wide format Epson and still have one and have a 17” that I’ve had for about 6 or 7 years and run a bunch through it too and never had any problems.From my research online, I've found that people generally agree that Epson makes better prints than Canon but Epson smaller printers are fragile and prone to problems--not the pro models, just the desktop models. Canon printers are said to be somewhat inferior to Epson printers as far as quality of image is concerned but the printers themselves are more reliable in the long run.
My experience agrees with this. I've owned two Epson 13x19 desktop printers and both printed beautiful prints. B&W is my specialty and the Epsons printed better prints than I could ever make in a chemical darkroom. But both printers died from the same disease--paper transport problems. The second Epson (P700) died just after the warranty expired. The first Epson, an R3000, worked for several years without any problem until it didn't work anymore. Very frustrating that the P700 developed the same transportation problems but over a much shorter period.
I'm not printing these days. I may buy another printer in the future. I'll try a Canon next time.
I just looked at the price of cartridges for my 7800, $148 each. Multiply that times 8. 😳 Fortunately I bought some spares for it and my 3880 two years ago before prices skyrocketed.I use an Epson P800 with the standard OEM inks. BW exclusively with its ABW function. I rarely print to its full paper size, but got it because its cartridges are said to be more economical. Although it hurts to see ink running low on those $60 cartridges.
John

My first photo printer over 20 years ago was an Epson 1280. I had a number of them since they never lasted more than 2 years. But they were designed for dye inks and we pushed pigment ink (Eboni K) through them to get good looking B&W prints, When they got to where the clogs were unbearable, you just bought another since they were less than $200. I have 20 year old prints from negs scanned on an old Minolta Scan Dual which costs around $200 and printed on an Espon 1280 that costs about the same. Those prints look as good as ones I print today. It just took a lot more skill, effort, and time back in those days. Now anyone with good knowledge of a photo editor such and Lightroom or Photoshop and a complete color managed workflow (important) can easily make great looking pr
As that printer is 25 year old technology, I cannot imagine anything produced today would be similar. Eboni ink is probably the same. The difference in today's technology is the ease of printing. Almost automatic once you completely understand using an image editor such as Lightroom or Photoshop. The Epson AWB function alone is like suddenly having auto exposure and auto focusing plus chimping compared to previously having the knowledge to needing the ability to capture all of that with only what was between your ears.What would be the closest equivalent to the Epson 1280 and four cartridge eboni carbon inkset available today?
Depending on where you are in the World, in Europe for instance there is company called Farbenwerk , they offer carbon inksets for both 6 and 4 ink Epson printers including cheap Ecotank Printers.What would be the closest equivalent to the Epson 1280 and four cartridge eboni carbon inkset available today?