Colorcamm Pro Pc 60 Driver
I am looking into buying one of the Roland PC-60 ColorCamm Pro that according to it's current owner only has about 50 hours or less of work on it. I have some questions before i proceed to purchase this. I want to know if it is cost effective to use it as a print/cut system compared to other current systems out there. I realize that this is thermal. I really do not know how much you can print with each cartridge.
I would like to get pasted experienced users of this machine to share some insight to this. I have printed a lot of smaller banners. One of my most popular size is 2x10, or 3x10.
Right now because i do not have a digital printer i pay wholesale what i consider to be a good price. One time i know someone told me that it would be so much cheaper if i did it on my own. Less than half of what i currently pay. Trying to keep prices out of the look here to not offend anyone.
Oct 28, 2008 Printing with a pc-60. The future of live TV with 60+ channels. No cable box required. Cancel anytime.
But if needed i can post them. Will a set of cartridges on this plotter actually even print an entire 2x10 banner? Approximately how many 3x3, or 4x4 stickers can i get out of it? Sorry, but i just never messed with anything like this. I have heard something about these machines having head problems.
I do not know if it is the first generation or what, or if the head issue was fixed by the time the last generation kicked in. Any help with this i really appreciated it. To tell you the truth, the only reason i am considering this one is because the price it right, and the owner swears it is in LIKE NEW condition.
And they did have it serviced here recently. I also figure that is it a good machine to get started in the print/cut work. I have turned down a lot of work because i cannot do this, but yet we cannot budget for a larger more expensive machine right now. So i cannot justify spending a high amount right now. Ccna security boot camp torrent8551877. Maybe soon in the future i can see it happening, but for now we need to start with something.
As an owner of a PC 60 I cannot recommend it. It is very slow. When I first got it back in 2000 I did some decals for my truck, about 12' x 24', I think it took over 2 hours to print them.
The ink head is only 1/2' at a time, I shudder to think what a banner would take to print, I'm don't think it's set up to handle banner material. It is also very expensive to run with the cartridges, I guess they are still available, seems like Roland wasn't going to support the machine any longer, can't remember where I read that.
My pc60 now sits with a damaged print head (the second time this has happened) so I now have an extra plotter when my old Roland bites the dust. The technology has evolved so much in the last 10 years it's amazing. The pc-60 was state of the art at the time, but certainly not now. Put your money in something else, my 2 cents worth. These things were great for small decals because typically, you don't need to laminate and they still had an outside fade resistance of 5 years, however, there's no way that you would catch me making a banner with one of these. Too expensive for the ribbon cost and to print anything of a distance was a risk.
I was thinking at one point, it was costing US around $12 psf to print full color. To outsource, it should only run a couple of dollars psf. Ribbon breaks were not a rare occurance. I've been pissed off more than once to find that 75% of the job was done and the ribbon would break and we'd have to start completely over. It was nice when we finally went with a real printer that we didn't have to babysit.
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