Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Last summer my film printer took a crap. But before I ordered one I talked with accurip and they said they had not plans to make the all black system for the P5000!
be careful! The 4900 had major issues and in general was not recommended for screenprinting. 'not sure what changes were made to the 5K though so hopefully it's a much more reliable piece of equipment.pierre
We have the P5000 with Black Pearl Accurip. It works as well as the 4900 in our experience. We've gone from the 4800 to the 4900 to the 5000. This was the right decision for us and I'd buy it again.
Quote from: jupmode on January 11, 2019, 09:03:49 AMWe have the P5000 with Black Pearl Accurip. It works as well as the 4900 in our experience. We've gone from the 4800 to the 4900 to the 5000. This was the right decision for us and I'd buy it again.can you please explain your reasoning? Most of us here don't have hands on experience with all three printers so it would be great to hear from somebody who does!pierre
We started with a used 4800 that we bought from someone local. When that died, we moved on to the newer version of that model, the 4900. And that's what we've done ever since and how we ended at the 5000. Switching printers is not something that you typically plan for. It's out of necessity when a printer starts to fail. So the decisions were made quickly. Since all three of these models have quite a few similarities, it was easy to go from one to the next. We're using the same film rolls, get the ink from the same supplier, and can replace parts with the older model if necessary. We aren't the most technical print shop. We run halftone work on a weekly, but not daily, basis. We're close to going CTS. These Epson printers get the job done for us, however I've never used anything else so I can't compare it to another film printer. I can send you some halftone tests we ran with the 5000 if you want to see them.