54 pound paper maximum. Look at the supported paper wieghts.
Bob
I am looking in to buying a really good Printer for the GF's business. She needs a really good printer for printing labels like this: http://designtagsetc.com/img/IMG_1364sm.jpg which are not high in detail, but the paper stock is heavy. So the printer needs to be able to handle thicker stock. She also sells her landscape pictures sometimes and we order a ton of copies of our pictures on-line just so she can frame them and what not. You know girl things. We would need a really good photo printer for this, so we can get off of the oFoto habit.
I'm leaning towards the Epson, but I want to know if you guys have any opinions on this. Have you owed an Epson before? I have not.
What we are looking at:
Epson Stylus Photo R1800 - About $500 - http://www.steves-digicams.com/2005_reviews/epson_r1800.html
100 year life time for photos
8 ink tanks
5760 x 1440 dpi
Will print 4"x 6", 5" x 7", 8" x 10", letter (8.5" x 11"), 11" x 14", 12" x 12", 13" x 19", B (11" x 17"), A3+, Super B (13" x 19"), user definable, plus 4", 8.3" and 13" wide panoramic roll papers
Cons:
I have a Canon camera
$100 more
Canon I-9900 - About $400 - http://www.steves-digicams.com/2004_reviews/canon_i9900.html
8 ink tanks
4800 x 2400 dpi
Will print Letter, Legal, 4" x 6", 5" x 7", 11" x 17", 13" x 19"
It will sync with my camera directly (not quite sure how important this is because because I store all my pics on a separate hard drive and technicly this would add a step to the proccess)
Cons:
Prints will fade
The resolution is not quite as high, but when do you really ever print at the highest resolution?
Warrantee is the same, one year.
I don't mind spending more $$$ if you know of a better printer, but it would have to be a huge difference in quality.

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