Printers in that class are either 24" or 44" if you want to print on photographic paper. If what you mean by printing on photographic paper you want to make true photographic quality prints, then aqueous is the only choice for true photo paper and true photo quality.
Choices in a 44" printer are either Epson 9800 or 9900, HP Z3200, or Canon IPF8100.
New they arein the $4500-5200 range.
All are multiple black printers, all do full bleed on most standard photo sizes, and all are pretty close in quality.
The canon is faster, the epson has more rip options can print on thicker stock than the others (and is the cheapest) and the HP is the cheapest to run on factory inks.
I run 6 printers, an epson 4000 and 9600 (same ink, 17" and 44") 3 HP Z3100 or 3200 printers (2 24" and 1 44") and an epson GS6000 solvent.
If you want to print on vinyl then you need to choose aqueous vinyls which will be 3-5 times more expensive than the solvent equivilant. And you will need to laminate to get any real outdoor life (1 year?) and even then it wont compete with the life of an unlaminated solvent print(2 years) or a laminated solvent print (3+ years)
I think that the HP Z class machines are the best of the current breed of aqueous pigment printers, they are the cheapest to run in the real world, the Z3000 class adds a clear overcoat that makes glossy photos look like true photos, and make a stunning canvas print. But new is close to $5000
I run the GS6000 for mostly canvas now, and its pretty damn good, but my most discerning canvas prints still go on the Z3100s.
In your price range, you may be best served by picking up a used/refurbed Z3100 or epson 9600. Both last generation machines, but ones that are well regarded and half the price of a new printer. The epson 9600 has myriad 3rd party inks available and the z3100 has nothing big to repair as you replace the heads yourself, so no real huge impact of a $2000 head repair...
Hope that helps...