streetsnake
Active member
Not another dreaded, "Help me Pick" thread but I'm still a relative newbie to the digital print world and was hoping the experts could weigh in. I'm a small printer that mainly focuses in on foiling/engraving/etc., and I don't know much compared to many of you. A couple years ago we purchased a used Xerox C70 and when it is working well, it is fine, however, we occasionally run into issues with roller/fuser marks on our reloaded (foil/thermo/engraving stock) which obviously ruins the piece. Also, as we've tried to grow our business a bit, I have not been impressed with the heavy coverage postcards, brochures, etc. I usually end up having to sub those out to a partner-printer. We have no maintenance contract, so we are purchasing/servicing the press and consumables. With that said, we need to continue our main book of business of running reloaded foiled/thermo/etc. but also would like the ability to produce high quality heavy coverage postcards, booklets, etc. and anything that may "come-up". I reached out to Xerox and a multi-brand salesperson and are looking at the the Xerox v280, Ricoh c7500 and Canon v800. I believe all will easily be able to run our 60-80# cover stock without issue. It then comes down to running envelopes, heavy coverage & higher weight paper (nothing really large...probably #110 cover), saddle stitched booklets, etc. As I can imagine, service is of utmost importance and also what am I not thinking about? All are fairly comparable from a monthly lease perspective, except I believe I might be getting a little more (header/footer trimmer) with the v280 and and is a smidge less expensive. On the flip-side, to add in the "beyond CMYK" kit for Xerox is a significant increase to the monthly lease and would likely never come close to covering the added expense. To give you an idea, we are currently in the process of running a booklet job of 1100 and this is by far an away our biggest job for booklets. We occasionally do runs of envelopes for some of our accounts but the C70 is not good, as it leaves corner creases and does not look very professional. I'm trying to kill two birds with one stone...continue on what we normally do but take advantage of potential opportunities for growth. Thanks in advance.