Phaser 8400 Ink Sticks - Save Money with Compatible!

Phaser 8400 Ink Sticks - Save Money with Compatible!
by Ben Pate

There are now more affordable color laser printers than ever, ranging from discounted old printers to newer and smaller models. Every small office or working group can now use a high-volume laser printer instead of an ink jet printer. Many different vendors now offer color laser printers that are so inexpensive that even individual users can afford them.

A fast laser printer will let you crank out lots of black and white pages. A good inkjet properly used can produce high-quality photographic images. For some of the best of each, the Phaser 8400 uses solid-ink technology to quickly deliver rich, even color. And with PostScript compatibility and color-tweaking, you get performance unmatched by an entry-level color laser printer.

The Phaser 8400, also known as phase-change printer, works almost like an offset printing press. Its ink comes in four colors, yellow, cyan, magenta, and black. The ink, however, comes as chunks of wax or small drop-in shapes, unlike the usual liquid or powdered form. This why it is also known as a wax-jet printer. There are slots below the hood of the printer, where, these shapes of wax, almost toddler-toy like in appearance, can be lodged.

For those who are used to standard cartridges, it can be disconcerting to find that the Phaser has no gauge to show how much ink is left, although the front panel shows a warning sign when the ink is running low. With this machine, you are expected to just open it and check. You can refill it whenever you wish - when you’re about to begin a major job, for example. You don’t have to wonder anymore whether the cartridge that’s in there will run out before you’re finished.

Unlike the hassles of disposing of or trying to recycle an ink cartridge or waste tank, the Phaser 8400 ink pack is friendly to the earth - requiring you to replace a single tiny kit or image drum lubrication package every ten or thirty thousand pages. There’s also a wastes tray you have to keep empty and replace now and then.

Inside the printer, the stubby crayons are melted. Drawing, speaking of environmental impact, up to 1,500 watts, though Xerox says the printer averages less than a fifth of that into an ink reservoir. A 1,236-nozzle, 600 by 600 dpi print head sprays the ink onto a heated, rotating drum, which transfers the image to paper in one pass versus the four passes of most low-priced color lasers.

The ink almost instantly solidifies again on the page, with no inkjet-style seeping or blotting on plain paper, and won’t smear if swiped by a damp finger though it can scratch off if rubbed with a fingernail. The result is output that almost looks damp when it’s dry. Solid-color areas appear practically painted on, with rich, glossy hues and absolutely none of the banding that plagues inkjets and, to a lesser extent, laser printers.

Phaser 8400 ink doesn’t utilize laser technology. It utilizes ink to make stunning color copies very rapidly. It is also compatible with PostScript, and you can adjust color settings in a way that’s not possible with a low level laser printer. The Phaser 8400 is a solid ink printer. Instead of using liquid or powdered inks, the Phaser 8400 solid ink printer utilizes small solid blocks of yellow, cyan, magenta, and black ink that are specially shaped to be held and used by the printer. The Xerox Phaser 8400 is revolutionary.

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