A few questions about moving on from an older printer. Full Rant below:
1- what is the expected life span of a Roland printer/cutter, when used heavily, but taken care of?
2- Is there a market for old printers? In some ways they seem like vehicles. In a lot of ways the old ones were superior machines- "they don't make them like they used to", but also, the old ones are always breaking down, like this awesome '88 jeep comanche I bought a few years ago. Was super fun to tool around in, but I quickly learned you need to be a DIY mechanic to keep it on the road (I'm not). My gearhead buddy has it now, and he replaces parts on it all the time, is always working on it, and loves it.
3- How does one go about selling a used printer?
Does anyone on here have experience with selling/buying an older printer? We have this machine that the boss started the company with (Roland Soljet XC-540) sitting in the corner gathering dust (figuratively speaking I do wipe it down regularly). My first year working here (the printer was about 10 then) it would print great for a few weeks then something would breakdown. We've replaced scan motor, filters, tubing, encoder, all kinds of stuff. Since then we've invested into newer truevis machines, and don't have the time or wherewithal to be constantly trouble shooting issues on the old one. Currently it's giving a "pinchroll error- invalid right position" message when you hit setup, even though the pinch rollers are in the correct place. Haven't printed anything on it in a year. I just clean the heads and wipe it down weekly.
The thing has paid for itself many times over. My boss is more concerned with getting it out of here before it loses any lingering value, than seeing a big payday from selling it. These soljets were like $30,000 new, and if someone walked in today with the means to get it out of here, and offered a couple grand for it, he wouldn't hesitate.
Is there a community of folks in the digital printing world, like my friend with the jeep, who enjoy fixing/refurbishing old printers instead of investing into new ones?
1- what is the expected life span of a Roland printer/cutter, when used heavily, but taken care of?
2- Is there a market for old printers? In some ways they seem like vehicles. In a lot of ways the old ones were superior machines- "they don't make them like they used to", but also, the old ones are always breaking down, like this awesome '88 jeep comanche I bought a few years ago. Was super fun to tool around in, but I quickly learned you need to be a DIY mechanic to keep it on the road (I'm not). My gearhead buddy has it now, and he replaces parts on it all the time, is always working on it, and loves it.
3- How does one go about selling a used printer?
Does anyone on here have experience with selling/buying an older printer? We have this machine that the boss started the company with (Roland Soljet XC-540) sitting in the corner gathering dust (figuratively speaking I do wipe it down regularly). My first year working here (the printer was about 10 then) it would print great for a few weeks then something would breakdown. We've replaced scan motor, filters, tubing, encoder, all kinds of stuff. Since then we've invested into newer truevis machines, and don't have the time or wherewithal to be constantly trouble shooting issues on the old one. Currently it's giving a "pinchroll error- invalid right position" message when you hit setup, even though the pinch rollers are in the correct place. Haven't printed anything on it in a year. I just clean the heads and wipe it down weekly.
The thing has paid for itself many times over. My boss is more concerned with getting it out of here before it loses any lingering value, than seeing a big payday from selling it. These soljets were like $30,000 new, and if someone walked in today with the means to get it out of here, and offered a couple grand for it, he wouldn't hesitate.
Is there a community of folks in the digital printing world, like my friend with the jeep, who enjoy fixing/refurbishing old printers instead of investing into new ones?