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Author Topic: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location  (Read 8045 times)

northerngal

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I have been trying to research this, but I need some help from people who have experience with these printers, please.
My HP DesignJet 130 died in December, after 15 years of excellent printing.  I want (at least) a 24" inch printer, but I just don't know about the maintenance/repair requirements of these new printers.
- I have a part-time photography business, and I am retired from my regular job.
- I sell most of my photographs as  fine art prints, or as custom framed prints that I frame myself using custom wooden frames made by my husband, who is a lifelong woodworker. I have never done canvas prints. So far.
- I do NOT make a high number of prints, ie I'm NOT a print shop. Probably the highest number of prints I would make in a month would be 60-80.   Most months it would be 10-20 prints. Most of my prints are 12x18 and 15x21 but I have done some 23x36.
- I live in Alaska, and I am about 200 miles from Anchorage.  This can cause problems with getting technical help/repairs. Quite a few years ago, I had a maintenance contract with HP, and when I had a problem with my DJ 130, they actually sent a technician from Anchorage to my home.  I was impressed.
- I am gone on camping or photo trips several times each year, for  2 or 3 weeks at a time.  I have read widely varying experiences that people have with their printheads plugging up, so I would want a printer that is least affected by sitting unused for that time.  The rest of the time, I make sure to make a print at least every week.

--- Since I do not print a high volume of prints, I am concerned that the HP Z9 is just too much printer for me.  I think it is made for a busy print shop.  I know that I never came close to using my DJ 130 to its full capacity.  I am just a part-time photographer and printer, so price does matter to me.
--- I would like to know what kind of maintenance by a company technician is required by any of these printers.  There are no photographic printer stores in Anchorage ( by far the largest city in the state), so any technician would have to come from one of office printer stores there. When I read reviews, I often see comments about needing to have the printer serviced.  Is this something that is a normal routine, or just when needed for repair?
--- The Premium Plus papers that I used with my old printer gave me excellent lightfastness. I read the thread on here started by eternal camper back in December, and  MHMG said,"HP chemists would have to have gone seriously backwards on light fade resistance, 2x or more, with the  Z9+ Photo Vivid ink set compared to the previous Z3200 Vivera set (which has  been tested) before the HP Photo Vivid results would be on a par with the Canon Lucia Pro-11 ink set." So does this mean that the Canon 2100 is not good regarding lightfastness????  I thought that Wilhelm Research had decent ratings for the Lucia ink. 
--- I have no experience at all with Canon printers.  I don't even know anyone who has one.  Most of the photographers I know here have Epson printers (P800, 3800, 4800, 7800) and I only know one other who had an HP.  I would prefer the HP, but honestly, I'm not sure I can afford it.  I definitely prefer to have a maintenance contract, and the contracts for the Z9 are pretty expensive.
---  Can one of the Epsons (P6000 for example) sit unused for a period (couple weeks) of time? Quite a few years ago, when I was working and gone to a remote site for a couple weeks, I occasionally had some issues with my HP printer, but I found that if I printed at least every 2 weeks, it was OK.  What is the Canon 2000/2100 like on this issue?
--- Do all of these printers have "auto clean" routines, and if so, do those routines use up large amounts of ink?

It's hard to find reviews of some of these newer printers.  For example, on B&H Photo, there is only 1 review of the Canon imagePROGRAF Pro-2100...

Since I feel that the Z9 might be too much printer for me, I was kind of leaning towards the Canon 2100, but now I've just read a bunch of Epson P6000 reviews that were really positive, and which seemed to imply that the printhead plugging issues are getting better.

I sure would appreciate any and all comments, especially on lightfastness and which printers have the least maintenance issues.
Thanks!!!



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NAwlins_Contrarian

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #1 on: January 14, 2020, 01:11:28 am »

FWIW, at the outset you might want to expand your options to include
* the Canon Pro-2000, which the Pro-2100 replaced, but which is still available (e.g., B&H lists it as in stock) and is less expensive (currently $1875 versus $2495); and
* the Epson P7000, which is basically a P6000 with the extra green and orange inks.
Note that I'm not suggesting the new Epson P7570, because its speed advantage over the P6000 and P7000 does not sound important to you, and the price is a lot more (P6000 is $2095, P7000 is $2595, and P7570 is $3895). Also note that I can't see how an HP Z9+ would be "too much printer" compared to these competitors, other than that it's more expensive ($2995) than most of them.

In terms of resistant to clogs etc. when left unused, the Canon Pro-2000 has an excellent reputation, and the Pro-2100 should be essentially identical in this regard. The old HP Z3200 also has an excellent reputation, and the Z9+ should be similar, but there are fewer user reports. The current Epsons are supposed to be substantially better than their predecessors (the 7890 and 7900, respectively), but there are reports of some clogs.

In terms of likely repairs, the Canon and HP heads are user-replaceable (and at moderate cost); the Epson heads need a trained technician to replace them (and a much higher cost).

In terms of fade resistance, the current Canon inks ("Lucia Pro") are (IMO / arguably) pretty good but significantly behind the current Epson inks ("UltraChrome HDX"--and probably / presumably the new P7570 inks, "UltraChrome Pro12"). The inks for the old Z3200 were by a good margin the most fade-resistant, and preliminary reports suggest the Z9+ inks may well be as good or better.

Given your usage pattern and location, I can't see buying an Epson. The question would then be between a Canon Pro-2000 for $1875, a Canon Pro-2100 for $2495, or an HP Z9+ for $2995. Is the HP's likely superior fade resistance (and/or built-in spectrophotometer) worth an extra $500 or $1120?
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mcbroomf

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #2 on: January 14, 2020, 06:01:05 am »

While I can't help on your printer choice I'd strongly suggest you set up your computer to run a test print weekly or even more (mine prints daily).  I was away for 6 weeks last year and had a friend come in and run a test print pattern once a week but since then I found that Qimage Ultimage can be set up to run one automatically and it's now done that over several 2 week trips.  Qimage is now available for Mac as well as Win and is worth it for that alone IMO.
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JeanMichel

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #3 on: January 14, 2020, 11:00:43 am »

I have both a P800 and a P6000. The P6000 is not used daily and sits idle for weeks at a time; so far, knock on wood, there have ben zero issues with head clogging or anything else. The same was not true with my departed 7890, purchasing the P6000 made more sense than repairing the 78090 at the time!

There is ample evidence that the Epson pigment inks -current and older - have much greater lightfastness than any chromogenic prints. I imagine that Canon and HP inks are similar.

If you plan to make canvas prints, spending a few more dollars on a 44 inch printer may be a better option. I occasionally print on canvas and that does restrict the maximum size of the image. At best, I get a 20 inch face if I use only ¾" stretcher bars; using thicker bars reduces the face by that much more. For paper prints I also restrict myself to 20 inches wide, big enough for me.

I chose the P6000 over the P7000 after looking at photographic output from both. Perhaps it just my vision, but I could not see any real differences between the prints. I do, or did, as I am leaving my design business, jobs requiring proofing (cmyk, Pantone, etc)  and for those I was much better to rely on the proofs from the printing house.

I have no idea on how the Canon and HP printers fare, but I suspect that they are equally good.

Best wishes for the new year.


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Eric Brody

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #4 on: January 14, 2020, 12:52:32 pm »

I'd look at Keith Cooper's printer reviews, http://www.northlight-images.co.uk. He's remarkably objective and helpful Mark Segal on this website and now on PhotoPXL also has superbly objective printer reviews. I've also followed this question for years, having lusted for a 24" printer and being a step below you in usage (strict amateur, rare print sales, finite home wall space). From reading way too many internet postings, I've concluded, as have many people, that as regards clogging, Epsons have been improving over time but are still more likely to clog than the Canons. Canon's have user replaceable heads whereas Epson do not. Canons effortlessly switch between matte and glossy paper, Epson still require an annoying ink switch (except for the newest one, the cost of which will buy a LOT of ink). Print quality seems to be excellent from all current Epson, Canon, and HP printers. I use Roy Harrington's QTR driver for my black and white images. QTR is not available for Canon printers so I'll likely stay in the Epson universe for now. Were it not for my obsession with QTR, if I needed a new printer today,(my 3880 is still chugging along) I'd almost surely get a Canon Pro-2000 or Pro-2100. A friend really loves his P6000 but that's anecdote and none of us should confuse anecdotes with real data.
Best of luck to you in your quest.
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MHMG

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #5 on: January 14, 2020, 01:02:11 pm »

I have had the Z9dr (dual roll with vertical trimmer) 44 inch model in my studio for about two months.  My good friend and frequent contributor to this forum, Mark Linquist, has the 24 inch single roll model of the Z9+.  There are distinct differences between the two models, especially with respect to cut sheet feeding, but all WF roll printers are best suited for use with rolls.  We can talk about cut sheet feeding later if you like. Given your description of use, you only need the single roll Z9+. If you routinely print on glossy/luster media, I do recommend adding the Gloss Enhancer kit to the Z9+ printer. GE is optional on the Z9 and can be added by the user at any time, but the kit comes with one new printhead as well as the GE clear coat ink, and if you do the installation right when the printer is new and being initialized for the first time, you won't need to install that printhead. You can thus save it as a spare because it's a universal print head on the Z9. Works for any pair of the color channels. Gloss enhancer is standard with Canon printer models using the Canon Pro-11 ink set (Pro-1000, 2000/2100, 4000/4100).  I also own a Canon Pro-4000 which is the 44 inch version of the Pro-2000. The Pro-2100 gets some new media handling features, as I understand it, but the ink formulation, print head configuration, and print quality are same as Pro-2000.

 I don't think you can go wrong with either the Pro-2000/2100 or the HP Z9+ models, but as a photographer and printmaker who is very particular about a color managed workflow, The Z9 just takes care of the printer calibration and custom ICC profiling steps easily. It has already spoiled me! One can calibrate and profile a new media on the Z9 in less than an hour, all pretty much unattended. And then jump right into serious printmaking without feeling like you've just run a color management marathon! Calibrating and profiling a new media on my Pro-4000 with a profiling kit like the Xrite i1Pro2 takes closer to half a day. And it's tedious. Many more hoops to jump through as well. So, there's that. Potential buyers need to weigh the cost/benefit of the Z9's built-in spectrophotometer, but I personally think it's worth every penny extra when comparing the initial costs and ongoing calibration/profiling regimens of any wide format inkjet printer.

The Epson, Canon, and HP 24/44 inch printer models being discussed here use pigmented inks, whereas your older DJ 130 used dye based inks. As such, all of these OEM pigmented ink sets will likely outperform your DJ 130 OEM dye-base ink on a variety of media with respect to light fastnesss and overall print permanence properties. I am readying a new round of light fastness tests on various media which will commence soon, and this round of tests will have direct sample comparisons between the newer HP photo vivid inks used in the Z9+ versus the older Vivera Pigment ink set used in the Z3200 models (I have an HP Z3200 printer in my lab as well).  So, it's technically a bit premature to claim superior light fade results with HP's latest Photo Vivid inks, but discussions I've had with HP's design team along with testing I've done on the older Vivera Pigment with Chromata Red ink set lead me to be very optimistic about the Z9's Photo Vivid fade resistance properties. In truth, media choice is THE WILD CARD with any of these pigmented ink sets when it comes to final print permanence ratings. Yet as others have noted, the Canon Lucia-Pro 11 ink set will most likely remain in third place by a factor as much as 2x... yet still better than what you had with the DJ 130.  That said, media choice matters even more when inherent ink stability is not as robust, so the HP and Epson printer models do provide a commendable light fastness superiority on many media over the Canon printer models at this point in time, and I think HP is most likely going to remain "king of the hill" when it comes to best-in-class fade resistance of it's aqueous pigmented ink sets. Outstanding fade resistance plus a color balanced fade signature when/if fading does eventually become noticeable matters to printmakers like me, not so much to others who believe any OEM pigment ink is probably "good enough". It's a personal decision. No right or wrong there.

My personal view of "too much printer" is that many photographers make the mistake of drawing a line in the sand at 13 and 17 inch desktop inkjet printers when with a little more effort and initial costs up front, they can really up their game with 24 inch roll models, and even stretching to 44 inches only adds some initial cost (and size and weight if you can deal with it) but really no more complexity to run and maintain. As for reliability between Canon, Epson, and HP, we all have read anecdotal horror stories about these manufacturers' printers and poor tech support after the sale, but average cost of ownership numbers and objective customer satisfaction surveys are impossible to come by, so IMHO, it's a bit of a roll of the dice.  Because you've had good experience with HP and the Z9 can be put on an extended warranty service contract, as can Epson's and Canons, I think in your situation, I'd take peace of mind and add the extended warranty with whatever printer you decide to buy.

Lastly, the Z9+ and the Canon Pro series models both do "behind the scenes" self-cleaning printhead maintenance. The Z9's automatic maintenance is more transparent to the user, i.e., it wakes from sleep and just quietly and efficiently does it, and I feel it's reassuring presence that all is well, so I don't find a need to feed the Z9 daily or weekly clog prevention prints. With my Pro-4000, it "hides" those maintenance routines in and around the print jobs, so it's there but far less transparent what's going on to the end user. As such, if I leave it unattended for a couple of weeks, I do wonder whether it's ready to go when I bring a new print job to it. Yet, honestly, it is highly reliable and ready to go at all times. So kudos to both Canon and HP for getting their thermal heads to run reliably without any real need for daily or weekly intervention until it is finally time to replace a print head. And when that happens, it's a simple enduser task on both the Canon and HP. No need to call a technician.

Good luck with your printer buying decision.

cheers,
Mark
http://www.aardenburg-imaging.com

« Last Edit: January 14, 2020, 01:17:04 pm by MHMG »
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Jim Kasson

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #6 on: January 14, 2020, 01:51:44 pm »

From reading way too many internet postings, I've concluded, as have many people, that as regards clogging, Epsons have been improving over time...

Not monotonically. The 9800, for example, is much more clog-free in intermittent use than the 9900.

Jim

gkroeger

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #7 on: January 14, 2020, 02:08:56 pm »

I have an Epson P7000 that often goes for weeks without use. I try to run a nozzle check every couple of weeks just to move some ink through. In two years, I have only had to run a nozzle cleaning twice, and both times just on one pair of inks.  Much better than my previous SC7800.

Glenn
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stockjock

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #8 on: January 14, 2020, 06:23:46 pm »

I have had the Z9dr (dual roll with vertical trimmer) 44 inch model in my studio for about two months.  My good friend and frequent contributor to this forum, Mark Linquist, has the 24 inch single roll model of the Z9+.  There are distinct differences between the two models, especially with respect to cut sheet feeding, but all WF roll printers are best suited for use with rolls.  We can talk about cut sheet feeding later if you like.

Hi Mark,

Would you mind talking about cut sheet feeding now?  I have a Canon iPF8400 that I have been very happy with except for having to laboriously manually feed cut sheets.  Consequently I use it almost exclusively for roll printing but I just tallied it up and I have 20 boxes of 17x22" paper lying around that I really ought to use and 17x22" is my standard print size even on rolls.  Is there a large format printer than can automatically feed cut sheets or should I just get a P800 for that?

As an aside, the Canon has worked flawlessly for me with relatively low print volumes but I have had to replace two print heads in the past 4 years.

Thanks,

Paul
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northerngal

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #9 on: January 15, 2020, 03:10:34 am »

Wow, thanks for the responses, everyone!
My mind is churning.
 To NAwlins_Contrarian, yes, I am open to those other models.
And Mark, thanks for the in-depth comments. I just watched a YouTube video on setting up a Z9, and I thought it was interesting how much the printheads and ink cartridges, and where they are in the printer is so much like how it was on my old HP printer.

OK, based on the need for expert technician assistance to install a new printhead on the Epsons, I think I am relegating them to the back burner.  So that leaves the Canon 2000/2100 and the HP Z9.  I also have not completely  decided whether or not to go with a 44-inch machine.
I'm not sure I can say I have had ALL good experiences with HP. I have spent a lot of worthless hours wading through their websites, and ordering things from them.  On the other hand, in the past they had fantastic no or low cost shipping, and that can be a major advantage for getting things to Alaska.  They did a great job with the next-day service contract, too.

I generally stick to a few paper options, so I am not too concerned about the time it takes to do profiles for new papers.  However, I am concerned about the lightfastness and longevity issues.  I'm hoping my prints will last for a long, long time.  I also have some framed prints in public buildings, and I hope to do more of that, and to have those prints look good for a long time.

At this point, I am leaning towards the HP Z9, but I need to look at this a little more, and get my head around the $ outlay it will take to get the printer and all the associated ink, printheads and accessories.  I'm more of a photographer than I am a printer.  It's a whole lot easier for me to spend a couple thou on a camera than it is on a printer!

Thanks again for all the input. I have to admit, I am NOT looking forward to ordering this printer, whichever one I get.  It's the beginning of a lot of worry and headache and angst.
Speaking of that, do most people order direct from the manufacturer, or from a reseller? Local or online?  I ordered my 130 direct from HP, but I have gotten most of my camera equipment from B&H, although I don't how good they are at things like printers.

Thanks again!

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msongs

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just got my new canon 2100 up and running....and first of all
« Reply #10 on: January 15, 2020, 07:45:57 pm »

the ink is a gouge. widely read on the net that setup uses half of the starter carts but it is clear that they use way more than that. have done a few prints and they look good of course, but have not yet gotten into regular printing. expecting it to work well for the price it ought to lol
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Jim Kasson

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Head strikes
« Reply #11 on: January 15, 2020, 08:16:21 pm »

I, too, am in the market for a new 24 /44 inch printer, to replace my aging -- but still operating, thank the Lord -- Epson 9800. I've been having head strikes with that on baryta roll paper, and haven't found a surefire way around them (increasing the plane gap helps). Are there any material differences among the current Canon, HP, and Epson printers WRt roll-paper head strikes?

I don't have any problem at all with sheet paper, but that's getting harder and harder to find in large sizes.

Jim

Panagiotis

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Re: Head strikes
« Reply #12 on: January 16, 2020, 02:45:55 am »

I, too, am in the market for a new 24 /44 inch printer, to replace my aging -- but still operating, thank the Lord -- Epson 9800. I've been having head strikes with that on baryta roll paper, and haven't found a surefire way around them (increasing the plane gap helps). Are there any material differences among the current Canon, HP, and Epson printers WRt roll-paper head strikes?

I don't have any problem at all with sheet paper, but that's getting harder and harder to find in large sizes.

Jim

I can comment only on the Canon PRO-4000 which I use. I leave everything at "Auto" (head height, sunction etc) which is the default for every media type. I have zero head strikes even on the stiff Canson Baryta Prestige 340.
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Mark Lindquist

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #13 on: January 16, 2020, 10:27:42 pm »

To me, this is a no-brainer.

The Z9+ is incredible, quiet, a work-horse, a Ferrari, and a truck - a Swiss Army Knife / Shopsmith of printers.

It does it all, fast and economically.

Amazing printer actually.  Good luck - Mark

HP DesignJet Z9+ 24-in printer review and evaluation
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Dan Wells

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #14 on: January 16, 2020, 11:55:22 pm »

I can't comment on HP - having not used anything from them newer than a DJ 130 (interesting machine, by the way - a true desktop 24" printer). All the new ones are 3-5x as big and heavy as that old DesignJet, although also much faster and with far improved roll handling - the DJ 130 claimed to handle rolls, but it really didn't - the "roll holder" wasn't powered, and was a much closer relative of a toilet paper roller than the sophisticated roll handlers on modern printers.

Between Canon and Epson, Canon for sure for the usage you described. Canons are impressively clog-free when used intermittently. Epsons are said to be getting better, but they still prefer daily use (e.g. a busy print shop, not an artist printing her own work). Some really high-production print shops like Epson better, because Canon heads have a finite life, and a shop that prints a ton can burn out the heads in a year or two (a 5 minute job to replace that you do yourself, but a $500 part). Most photographers get much more than that out of a Canon head - I've never replaced one in one of my own Canons, and the one I did for friend, the machine was 6 years old.

Epson heads last the life of the machine - unless they get a really bad clog. If you do kill an Epson head with a clog, it's not worth replacing on a 24" printer, and the math isn't great even on a 44" printer (it's about a $2000 job that involves a service call - it might be even more expensive in Alaska) - a new 24" printer is often under $2500 with a full set of new ink and a warranty, while a new 44" is about $3500 with ink and warranty. It's only really worth it on a $10,000 60" machine.

HP heads are more or less similar to Canon, except that they take a bunch of cheaper heads instead of one expensive one - a great feature if one channel goes out.

I currently own a Canon Pro-2000, and I love it - an easy machine to use, terrific print quality. I print kind of like you do, and I've never had a problem with my Pro-2000.
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stockjock

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #15 on: January 17, 2020, 02:37:07 am »

To me, this is a no-brainer.

The Z9+ is incredible, quiet, a work-horse, a Ferrari, and a truck - a Swiss Army Knife / Shopsmith of printers.

It does it all, fast and economically.

Amazing printer actually.  Good luck - Mark

HP DesignJet Z9+ 24-in printer review and evaluation

Hi Mark.  How does the Z9+ handle cut sheets and does each sheet need to be manually loaded or does it have any kind of automatic cut sheet feeder?
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northerngal

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #16 on: January 17, 2020, 02:42:17 pm »

I would be interested in hearing about cut sheets, too. I don't think I have seen cut sheets being used in any of the videos I have looked at.
Up until now, I have used mostly sheets, although we  made a roll holder for the DJ 130 and I made large prints that way. I will look at what is available.  The HP paper I used to get is no longer available.
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MHMG

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #17 on: January 17, 2020, 03:28:26 pm »

I would be interested in hearing about cut sheets, too. I don't think I have seen cut sheets being used in any of the videos I have looked at.
Up until now, I have used mostly sheets, although we  made a roll holder for the DJ 130 and I made large prints that way. I will look at what is available.  The HP paper I used to get is no longer available.

The Pro 2000/4000 models handle cut sheet from the front of the machine. You have to lift a lever, slide the sheet in, square it up with two orange lines (effectively defining where one corner of the sheet must rest before closing lever), then close lever. The orange lines are just guidelines. There are no physical guides to line the edge of the sheet up against. If you don't get it lined up right along those orange guidelines it will fail a skew check, you have to lift lever and try again. Or it may take the sheet, but now your positioning of the image will be a little off. So, practice helps. That said, I did get much better loading cut sheet over time on my Pro-4000. However, loading large cut sheet, say a 24x36 or 32x40, takes more skill because you will want to keep both hands on a large sheet so that it doesn't slip. That means closing the lever gets tricky because you will at the last moment have to transfer one hand over to close the lever. Bottom line: Pro2000/4000 aren't ideal for loading cut sheet, but you get used to it.

My Z9dr (dual roll) feeds a sheet from the top surface of the printer. You first indicate on the LCD panel of the printer that you want to load cut sheet. It guides you with instructions on the panel. Small sheets (letter size) feed fairly deep into the slot, and it's best to keep pressure up against a springy stop with one hand while using the other to touch the LCD touch screen when you are ready to proceed. The slot gives a fair amount of resistance, so I doubt you could get a thin sheet of bond paper into it without creasing it. But it is fine for RC photo or thicker fine art sheet, albeit a bit stiff with thicker sheet, so go slow.  Like the Pro-2000, the printer then performs a skew check, and if it fails, (which it does all too frequently, but with practice it's happening less and less on me) it will tell you to unload the sheet with one of two behaviors 1) a full movement unloading of the sheet so you have to start over, or 2) an internal release of the sheet where it will tell you to align again to a set of guidelines on the roll 1 cover of the printer. I still haven't completely figured out what prompts one of those behaviors over the other, and large sheets get tricky because sometimes it's better to load a large sheet from behind the printer into this top center slot tray, at which point, it gets difficult to press the touch screen and hold sheet in the slot at the same time. However, one nice thing about the Z9dr center cut sheet slot is that it "parks" the rolls and allows you to feed cut sheet without removing the rolls. They are ready to go whenever you stop using cut sheet. With the Canon Pro-2000/4000 you have to remove the roll from the feed position (but the spindle with roll can stay on the printer) and then reload the roll after you are finished feeding cut sheets.

I believe the single roll Z9+ has both a center slot like the Z9dr and a rear slot with straighter feed path on the rear of the machine. The Z9dr gives that slot up for the second roll position. As such the Z9 single roll model cut sheet handling would be best described by Mark Linquist, and hopefully he will chime in on this discussion. From my own discussions with Mark, I think the single roll Z9 also parks the roll so that you don't have to remove it, but again, hopefully Mark L. will confirm.

The Canon Pro2100/4100 have made roll handling efficiency improvement over the Pro2000/4000, so I can't say how these newer Canons fare with cut sheet handling. Ditto with the latest Epson printers as I haven't even seen one let alone used it.

Cheers,
Mark M.
http:/www.aardenburg-imaging.com
« Last Edit: January 18, 2020, 01:17:59 pm by MHMG »
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Mark Lindquist

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #18 on: January 18, 2020, 05:31:22 pm »

I would be interested in hearing about cut sheets, too. I don't think I have seen cut sheets being used in any of the videos I have looked at.
Up until now, I have used mostly sheets, although we  made a roll holder for the DJ 130 and I made large prints that way. I will look at what is available.  The HP paper I used to get is no longer available.

The 24" Z9+ is great at handling cut sheets as long as you make the little stick on guide that I discussed in one of the threads here (possibly someone can find it).
In order to use cut sheets, unfortunately the roll has to be unloaded, as the sheet feeds in, in the rear tray.  Apparently one can load from the top but I don't do it that way.

I have about 98-99% success loading sheets from the rear tray the first time now.

All of these printers are designed as roll printers - it's that simple.  But if you are doing a lot of sheet fed work, the Z9+ 24" is fine and does a superb job.

-Mark
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northerngal

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Re: Need a new 24" printer: Canon 2100, HP Z9 or Epson 6000? Remote location
« Reply #19 on: January 22, 2020, 03:04:05 am »

Thanks, guys!   :)
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