- Registrado
- 11 de Jun, 2018
My current laser printer has been around almost 12 years and still prints reliably. The only thing is that the part that opens up to accept manual-feed paper has the extension part break off. I use that infrequently enough that it's not a big deal.I have a laser. I don't use it often - it can go months without me printing something. Then I need to print something and it works just fine. No gunged up ink, no silly-priced tiny wee cartridges with more DRM than Denuvo. I turn it on and it prints. Got it... five years ago? Six?
I also agree with @moocow 's comments about Brother Printers. Back in the day, I had a dot matrix that was an absolute workhorse that ran for years before abruptly dying. I definitely got my money's worth out of it. My current home office printer is a Brother multi-function that I'm happy with. The only issues I've had are:
- An aftermarket drum unit went bad on it despite reporting 30-some percent life remaining. A Brother brand drum only cost $5 more than the generic version so I figured cheaper wasn't better for drum units.
- The toner cartridges are much smaller than those on the Brother printer it replaced. Even the maximum yield cartridges tend to run out at a faster pace during my peak usage season. As long as the printer remains reliable for years to come, though, it's worth it.
I also agree with USB printers having quirky issues. What I hate most is when a USB-connected printer of mine stops working only to learn that, for no apparent reason, the system installed a second copy of the printer on another "port" and made that the new default printer without any sort of notification. That's an absolute PITA, especially when the system just as randomly reverts back to the original port/setup.
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