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Does anyone keep buying a new printer?
Almost three years ago I bought a new printer/scanner.
Our existing one was out of ink and the offer price on this new one was almost the same as the cost of a new ink cartridge. Given the new one was wireless and came with ink anyway, I decided to get the new one. My printing needs have reduced from as many as 100 sheets a year to about 2 and maybe something else every 5 or 10 years. I just needed to print something for the first time in nearly a year and the cartridge has dried out. It needs another cartridge @ $25. I made a joke about buying another printer. But then I looked and for $12 more (another offer) I can buy a new wireless printer (same make - HP) which doubtless also has an ink sample that would meet several years need (if it didn't dry out). But the cartridges for this new printer are $17, a saving of $8. This means a new printer could cost $12 more than the ink for the current printer but I more than get that back 2 cartridges later and then spend less money with each subsequent cartridge. This way of thinking reminded me of the reason for buying the last one, except that one had the bonus of stepping up. But isn't this just crazy that it's much the same cost to buy a new printer as ink for a current one? Anyone else have this predicament? |
Re: Does anyone keep buying a new printer?
No, because like many, I save it to a flash and print them at work.
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Re: Does anyone keep buying a new printer?
I bought a laser printer a few years ago for $99, still on the original toner cartridge, it says 3,000-4,000 sheets, but 3 or so years in and still printing, we maybe print 10-20 sheets per year.
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Re: Does anyone keep buying a new printer?
Refill at Costco if they're compatible
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Re: Does anyone keep buying a new printer?
Originally Posted by BristolUK
(Post 12415116)
Almost three years ago I bought a new printer/scanner.
My printing needs have reduced from as many as 100 sheets a year to about 2 and maybe something else every 5 or 10 years. I just needed to print something for the first time in nearly a year and the cartridge has dried out. With that low level of use wouldn't a flash drive and using the printers at the local library or Staples work. |
Re: Does anyone keep buying a new printer?
Originally Posted by Partially discharged
(Post 12415130)
Somehow I don't think a customer who prints 2 sheets a year is the prime customer base that the printer and cartridge companies are going after.
With that low level of use wouldn't a flash drive and using the printers at the local library or Staples work. But buying a Bitcoin maker and running that at work I mean the library, that would be dishonest! Err, more dishonest.... |
Re: Does anyone keep buying a new printer?
Originally Posted by Yorkiechef
(Post 12415120)
No, because like many, I save it to a flash and print them at work.
Originally Posted by Mr Bean
(Post 12415124)
Refill at Costco if they're compatible
Originally Posted by Partially discharged
(Post 12415130)
Somehow I don't think a customer who prints 2 sheets a year is the prime customer base that the printer and cartridge companies are going after.
With that low level of use wouldn't a flash drive and using the printers at the local library or Staples work. Do those copy machines in Shoppers take a thumbdrive? That would be better. But better again would be an ink cartridge capable of printing how ever many sheets actually doing so. My step daughter thinks that just printing something every now and then would prevent it going dry. The $25 cartridge is supposed to do 190 sheets. Could I just waste, say, a weekly printed sheet to keep it ticking over and get four years worth of two sheets? That would be okay. |
Re: Does anyone keep buying a new printer?
I buy black ink only, I change the black cartridge and leave the colour one dry, I then set to print in monochrome
Any pics I have I have them done at Walmart |
Re: Does anyone keep buying a new printer?
All useful suggestions but none of it changes the basic premise that regardless of how much printing is done, it's possible to spend less buying a new printer than replacement ink cartridges.
Had my printing needs remain unchanged I would still be faced with the choice outlined in the first post. |
Re: Does anyone keep buying a new printer?
Originally Posted by Yorkiechef
(Post 12415120)
No, because like many, I save it to a flash and print them at work.
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Re: Does anyone keep buying a new printer?
The answer is generally no.
When a printer dies, I look on ebay to see where I can buy the cheapest batch of ink cartridges that fit Epsom machines, then I look on google to find which printers will use the cartridges then I look at Craigslist for the cheapest secondhand printer that fits the bill. I did buy a new one a few months ago but only because I had a load of cartridges with no home and a new one cost little more than a used one. The one truth I've learned to live with is that the one time you really need a printer is the one time it won't go. So I've got two of them. |
Re: Does anyone keep buying a new printer?
Calgary libraries allow 75 back to back or single sheet prints per month per library card. No charge. When Mrs Y was back at University here in Calgary, this became a very useful resource.
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Re: Does anyone keep buying a new printer?
As a snowbird, and keeping two homes, it was always a problem when the printer ink had dried on return to either home.
I found by immersing the print-head in boiling water and drying on tissue till I saw some ink leak out, then re-installing and doing the printer-cleaning process, it worked every time. |
Re: Does anyone keep buying a new printer?
Originally Posted by Yorkiechef
(Post 12415176)
Calgary libraries allow 75 back to back or single sheet prints per month per library card. No charge. When Mrs Y was back at University here in Calgary, this became a very useful resource.
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Re: Does anyone keep buying a new printer?
Originally Posted by BristolUK
(Post 12415140)
All useful suggestions but none of it changes the basic premise that regardless of how much printing is done, it's possible to spend less buying a new printer than replacement ink cartridges.
Had my printing needs remain unchanged I would still be faced with the choice outlined in the first post. |
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