We've had the ALM 3220 (its predecessor) for probably a decade or so. I'm not sure what improvements were made on the 3222, but ours has served its purpose despite its headaches. If you're looking to do 10 - 100 sheets or so here or there and you have a reliable dealer network for the laminate (this is big since they've had shortages over the last year), you'd probably be in good shape with it. I'd recommend printing some test sheets on your press and running those through a demo machine, paying close attention to:
- how it feeds (namely if it doubles and if it has any way to mitigate doubles),
- how long it can be left unattended (our 3220 has a very small feeder on it, meaning pretty frequent babysitting),
- when the side slitters are engaged: how consistent the trim position is on the sheets (ours walks quite a bit),
- how sturdy its feeder side guides are (this unfortunately pairs with the above since they wobble every time we reload paper),
- if there's a dwell mark on the lead edge of your laminated goods (the 3220 pauses when cross-cutting sheets just long enough to lead to this quality issue, especially on solid prints)
- if your printed goods delaminate.
For that last point, I should mention that that's a pretty hefty concern since you're stuck with Fujipla's laminate. Even on light-but-full coverage goods, this has lead to some wonky results after we take the goods to our guillotine or corner rounder. Run some solid CMYK patterns off your press and run them through the laminator to see if this is a concern. Usually you can tell the moment you bend the laminated sheet between your thumb if it's going to have a quality problem, but you can also draw an "X" with a knife on the sheet to see if you can grab the laminate independently of the paper.
With that being said, our 3220 has made us money, and we've successfully used it for thousands upon thousands of gloss, matte, and silk laminated sheets over its lifetime. You can't beat the convenience or footprint in its price range, and it's a breeze to set up. If you have consistent lamination work, just keep in mind you might outgrow it pretty quickly.