Vince Lupo
Whatever
I'm thinking of buying a 3880, but was wondering if it was still a good choice since it's now a 3 year-old model?
Haven't tried both and I know this doesn't help much but I have a 3000 and it is fantastic, Don't know what else I could ask for in a printer except maybe to print bigger (13x19's don't look as big once they're on the wall). I would say it depends how much you plan to print each year. Bigger carts are a better deal if you're going to use them but if you won't print enough to use up all the ink than I believe they dry up over time.
I don't want to spoil the Epson party but have you looked at Canon printers
their new pro line looks really good and if the heads go bad you can replace
them yourself instead of dumping the printer for a new one.
Range
............. Stupid question, but would one notice a print quality difference between a print done on a 3880 and the same print done on something like a 9900? Say an 11"x14" print?
Are you talking about something like the Pixma Pro 1? Truthfully, I haven't looked at Canon printers at all, and the Pixma Pro 1 seems to be in more or less the same price range as the 3880. Is it a coin toss between the two, or are there really measurable differences?
The *big* difference is, you can replace the head of Canon pro printers if they get clogged or damaged severely.
Try this with Epson printers.
Well now I'm looking at the Pixma Pro 1 -- seems like the 3880 and the Pro 1 are pretty close in terms of quality, though I'm not sure if more ink cartridges in the Canon necessarily means a better print (I'm thinking for exclusively black and white prints). People seem to like the Pro 1 as much as the 3880, so making a choice between the two is a bit tough!
I can appreciate the ability to change printer heads in the Canon, but from most of the user reviews that I've read online about the 3880, clogged printer heads don't seem to be an issue, but of course things do happen.
What's the deal with the Canon printer not being able to print 11"x14"? You have to 'fool' the printer or something?
Theoretically, the 3880 / 3800 has a better spec with a native resolution of 720 ppi where the larger models have a native resolution of only 360 ppi. From a practical standpoint, the human eye cannot discern the difference.
As far as the 3880 being 3 years old, realize there have been no significant advancements in printer technology for many years, only marketing buzz. The Epson 2400 / 2800 / 2880 / 3000 are basically the same and the 3800 / 3880 differ from them only by having a wider carriage.
I have been printing with 13x19 printers for about 11 -12 years now and have made exactly two 12x18 prints. When properly matted and framed, those 12x18 prints were simply too big to go anywhere without dominating the entire wall. My standard exhibition print size is either 10x12.5 or 9x13.5 both working nicely in a 16x20 frame with a proper size mat. Also, be aware just how physically large the 3800 / 3880 are.