![]() Some of these questions will be answered soon enough for me. I am defending the WF because I am currently building one. I can't see where the loss of quality would even be that noticeable except in a hard surface print job. It is possible that the print quality will not be quite as good as some of the pro printers but when printing to cloth, the print quality is only so good anyway. It all depends on what you want to do with it in the end. ![]() It is also a very simple printer with fewer sensors and motors to deal with. For a cheap printer, the WF is a great choice and it is very cheap compared to some others. ![]() I do agree that the frame is weak but by using the existing plastic casing, it makes for a pretty solid platform, just requires some cutting. Just cut the pump off the capping station and there you go. While there are other negatives, having the PF roller drive the pump is actually an advantage to me. I generally disagree with Smalzstein's point about the WF series. While you can compare one to another to get a relative idea, the final print speed of a full color full page high res print is not going to be as stated in the specs. ![]() Unless you are planning on doing 100's of shirts per day, what is a couple of extra minutes per shirt? Also keep in mind that most stated speeds are not at the highest quality. You are only going to be as fast as you can load a shirt. I'm not sure about the huge emphasis on speed. So if you print a green for example, the driver/printer determines what mixture of cyan/light cyan/ and yellow is needed to get the shade you want. You could conceivably color correct your way to only 4 channels but what is the point? Through the default drivers, the print is converted to the appropriate channels as the printer sees it not as you tell it. No you cannot control individual ink channels without a RIP. Printing Speed 11 Seconds per 10 x 15 cm photo (Epson Premium Glossy Photo Paper), 28 Pages/min Color (plain paper 75 g/m²), 28 Pages/min Monochrome (plain paper 75 g/m²)Ĭolours Light Magenta, Magenta, Yellow, Light Cyan, Cyan, Black Printing Speed ISO/IEC 24734 8.5 Pages/min Monochrome, 8 Pages/min Color Specifications - Expression Photo XP-950 - Epson Printing Speed 34 Pages/min Monochrome (plain paper 75 g/m²) Printing Speed ISO/IEC 24734 15 Pages/min Monochrome, 8.2 Pages/min Color Specifications - Epson WorkForce WF-7015 - Epson So I think that the XP-950 is the best choice.Įpson 1430/1500W (6 inks) is so slow! ISO Speed is 2.8 ppm I say that 7015 is 4 carts and office printer instead XP-950 is 6 carts and photografic printer You can also try /r/linuxquestions or /r/linux4noobs here on Reddit.XP-950 speed is almost the same of WF-7015 for color printing (8ppm), and half for monocrome.īut if you want digital print on Tshirts I think that you print in color mode. If you are not getting timely or accurate help here, please ask again in one of the fora listed in the sidebar. From the: Manjaro FAQĪlthough we will try to give support, we just don't have the breadth or depth of the official forum. How is 'Manjaro' Pronounced? As in Mount Kilimanjaro, which was the inspiration for the name. as well as a selection of realtime kernels. There are builds for ARM devices like Raspberry Pi, Odroid etc. Community releases include Enlightenment (E17), OpenBox, Mate, FluxBox, Cinnamon, LXDE, LXQt, & Deepin. Official releases include Xfce, KDE & Gnome as well as a minimal net-edition. It provides all the benefits of a rolling release distro and includes a user-friendly installer, tested updates that try very hard to not break your system and a community of friendly users for support. Manjaro is a GNU/Linux distribution based on Arch Linux.
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