Re: C1 imagepress copy quality question
I usually give Canon rave reviews but I have to give them thumbs down for the C-1. Mostly was their lack of foresight for the industry and this product and who was going to use it and how much.
It may have great quality but it was made too slow for who was going to be using it. They should have made parts last longer for more of a moderate production environment and they should have anticipated it being used for higher coverage percentages.
I remember reading studies on coverage usage before and typical office environments on color average 12-25% or so. Commercial printers and copy shops are much higher. The latter of which are the ones that are going to buy the c1s. 6% coverage is typical for a b/w document not a color document unless it's a letterhead.
Unless Canon wasn't expecting these machines to be used so much, I don't understand why the drums are good for like 150k or less. How do they go from drums that rate for 5 million down to low hundred thousand? Is it really a cost issue? As far as I know there shouldn't be any difference between b/w and color other than the pigment color in the toner as far as the toner/drum/developer are concerned.
I usually give Canon rave reviews but I have to give them thumbs down for the C-1. Mostly was their lack of foresight for the industry and this product and who was going to use it and how much.
It may have great quality but it was made too slow for who was going to be using it. They should have made parts last longer for more of a moderate production environment and they should have anticipated it being used for higher coverage percentages.
I remember reading studies on coverage usage before and typical office environments on color average 12-25% or so. Commercial printers and copy shops are much higher. The latter of which are the ones that are going to buy the c1s. 6% coverage is typical for a b/w document not a color document unless it's a letterhead.
Unless Canon wasn't expecting these machines to be used so much, I don't understand why the drums are good for like 150k or less. How do they go from drums that rate for 5 million down to low hundred thousand? Is it really a cost issue? As far as I know there shouldn't be any difference between b/w and color other than the pigment color in the toner as far as the toner/drum/developer are concerned.
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