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Thread: Epson 2200 to 4800 - practicle for hobbiest?

  1. #1

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    Epson 2200 to 4800 - practicle for hobbiest?

    I'm quite tempted to upgrade my epson 2200 to a 4800 to use for color landscape prints. I like the idea of blacker blacks, the printers consistancy in using profiles, and of course the ability to make occational 16x20's. Before I make a rash decision to chase the newest technology, I want to think of the hidden cost. If I start printing more 13x19 / 16x20 sized prints, I will spend more on ink, paper, and large mats. Then again this machine is supposed to be quite econimical in respect to ink usage? I'm curious to hear from others who have made the transition to a larger printer to hear how much of a financial hit it has been compared to what you used before. Of course if I were selling 10 prints a week this would not be an issue.

  2. #2

    Epson 2200 to 4800 - practicle for hobbiest?

    Well, I jumped all the way to a 7800. A friend reminded me that "life isn't a rehearsal... eat dessert first!" So I did. The printer is very economical on ink usage, except for initial startup and if you switch from matte black to photo black. I am, of course, spending more money on ink, paper and mats. I am loving it but I can't say there is much practical about it. It would be much cheaper to send the stuff off to West Coast Imaging... but I feel like I have found the art again. I am able to make the prints I envision.

  3. #3
    Resident Heretic Bruce Watson's Avatar
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    Epson 2200 to 4800 - practicle for hobbiest?

    Something to consider are the new Canon Pixma Pro9500 and the Imageprograph iPF5000.

    The new inks test out about like the Ultrachromes for longevity, have considerably bigger gamut, and you don't need to change the black inks out for matte and glossy papers. Oh, yes, they are three times faster (that's 3x!) than the Epsons. But the biggie is, it looks like the ink is going to be much cheaper than Epson's ink. Epson will of course lower their ink prices, but probably not to match.

    If I were getting ready to buy a printer this size, I'd wait a couple of weeks until these babies hit the shelves and scope out actual street pricing for printers and inks. Might give you more choices. Of course, YMMV.

    Bruce Watson

  4. #4

    Epson 2200 to 4800 - practicle for hobbiest?

    Bruce,

    I'm doing exactly what you suggest at the moment... biding my time. Do you have any sources for information on the Canon printers at the moment? There's precious little information to spare right now; apparently Canon has not even released demo printers to anyone yet.

    I'd love to see any info you have on the printers.

    ---Michael

  5. #5

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    Epson 2200 to 4800 - practicle for hobbiest?

    I second the advice that if you are looking at the 4800, consider the 7800. It's not that much more but it goes all the way, baby. The biggest difference is that you will probably spend most of your time printing on roll paper rather than sheets. With the new Museo Silver Rag the print curl is not an issue at all and the results are really sensational. If you are shooting LF I think the 7800 is almost a no-brainer.

  6. #6
    Doug Dolde
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    Epson 2200 to 4800 - practicle for hobbiest?

    I bought an R2400 a while back and wish I had gone for the 4800 instead. The R2400 seems like it's always running on fumes. In fact it totally stopped due to an empty light magenta cartridge. Now I'm waiting for UPS to deliver more. The 4800 should be a lot more economical and won't run out of ink so often.

    Of course now I want a bigger one, question is 7800 or 9800. If you buy the best (or biggest) then you can never regret getting a lesser one. Still $5K is a lot to spend on a printer. I'm using WC I for now for big prints but it would be a lot of fun to do my own.



    www.painted-with-light.com

  7. #7

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    Epson 2200 to 4800 - practicle for hobbiest?

    I agree with the ink usage thing. I also have a 2200 which is pretty much always flashing one ink position or another as about to run out or totally run out. When you buy the 7800 you have to budget another $1000 for the second set of ink carts which will be required *very* soon after the ones that ship with the printer are used up... but at that point the ink usage is a blessed relief in comparison with the insatiable appetite of the smaller printers.

  8. #8

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    Epson 2200 to 4800 - practicle for hobbiest?

    I agree with others about the ink usage issue. I have a 2200. I love the print quality but the thing drinks ink like I used to drink beer.
    Brian Ellis
    Before you criticize someone, walk a mile in their shoes. That way when you do criticize them you'll be
    a mile away and you'll have their shoes.

  9. #9

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    Epson 2200 to 4800 - practicle for hobbiest?

    I have a couple of 2200s and use ink from the 4000 (colour 2200, CIS for six inks, spongeless refillable cartridges for MK and PK) or 4800 (B&W 2200, CIS). I reckon that the ink costs are about half of what they would be if I used 2200 carts, and I get to use K3 inks in a 2200.

    Best,

    Helen

  10. #10

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    Epson 2200 to 4800 - practicle for hobbiest?

    Hello,
    naive questions from a naive hobbyist: trying to make the point on printers quality (I would like to do it with scanners too), I find that, when reviewed, printers are usually compared to alike models, but how would they rank on an absolute value scale? how does this R2400 (or 4800) compare to an enlarger print? and to a shop’s digital minilab? and to a Lambda or Lightjet print?
    The R2400 review at photo-i (http://tinyurl.com/s9fqe) concludes “The EPSON Stylus Photo R2400 doesn't compete with traditional wet chemistry photographs - it doesn't need to as it is streets ahead of anything I have seen produced in a darkroom”: should I take this?
    Thanks to all those who’d take the time to answer,

    Lino

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