HP B9180 - Anyone use it?
gluwater
Registered Users Posts: 3,599 Major grins
I've been looking at buying a printer for a while and have been comparing the Epson 2400 and the HP B9180. I think I am going to get the HP B9180 but before I pull the trigger give me some feedback. For those that haven't heard about it, it is a pigment based inkjet that uses 8 inks and can print up to 13x19.
The positive:
The paper cartridge and manual feed both feed from the front.
27mL ink cartridges are large for this grade of printer.
Closed loop, self calibration.
User replaceable print heads.
All inks are always in the printer unlike the Epson 2400.
The negative:
There is no roll feed.
Inks cost more per mL than the Epson 2400. HP = $1.18/mL, Epson = $.69/mL
The unkonwn:
Which printer uses more ink. This is the hidden cost most people don't consider. Even thought the HP's ink is more expensive, if the printer uses less ink than the Epson it would still be cheaper. The opposite would be true if it uses more ink than the Epson.
So does anyone here use this printer? If you do use it I would be grateful for any input you could give me. Thanks.
The positive:
The paper cartridge and manual feed both feed from the front.
27mL ink cartridges are large for this grade of printer.
Closed loop, self calibration.
User replaceable print heads.
All inks are always in the printer unlike the Epson 2400.
The negative:
There is no roll feed.
Inks cost more per mL than the Epson 2400. HP = $1.18/mL, Epson = $.69/mL
The unkonwn:
Which printer uses more ink. This is the hidden cost most people don't consider. Even thought the HP's ink is more expensive, if the printer uses less ink than the Epson it would still be cheaper. The opposite would be true if it uses more ink than the Epson.
So does anyone here use this printer? If you do use it I would be grateful for any input you could give me. Thanks.
0
Comments
"You miss 100% of the shots you don't take" - Wayne Gretzky
SmugMug Technical Account Manager
Travel = good. Woo, shooting!
nickwphoto
I have thought about upgrading to one of the newer HP's. But I simply cannot go one of the quality and size you're discussing...(I have an older HP952 I use for general printing), But... I use an HP 7960 for prints, and the quality is superb, expecially using HP paper... There's a chemical thing involved. On that printer (also an 8 color printer) I incorporate the grey cartridge, and that goes pretty quickly, faster than the color inks are used. Seems like there's an implication that the grey cart is only for B&W... but I'm here to tell you the tones it produces in color are worth the expense. The newer inks HP came out with are supposed to be even more impressive... but last time I checked only one cart was available for mine.
Short story... I would have no problems doing the HP deal because of my extreme good luck with both those.
I'd like to know how you like it...
OH!... BTW... I watch for, and buy, my HP supplies when promos are running, and mostly use Office Depot's Advantage card when my credits hit every 90 days... Last batch I bought for about 40% Reg. retail... have had no problems whatsoever with carts "drying up" on shelf.
Mike
http://gean.smugmug.com http://www.ourspecialnet.com http://ourspecial.net
One feature you may want to consider is that the ink is used intermittently even when you are not printing. The HP B9180 maintains ink flow as long as the printer is powered in order to keep the print heads clean.
SmugMug Technical Account Manager
Travel = good. Woo, shooting!
nickwphoto
SmugMug Technical Account Manager
Travel = good. Woo, shooting!
nickwphoto
SmugMug Technical Account Manager
Travel = good. Woo, shooting!
nickwphoto