Wide Format Printers

If you want see more UV printers click here

AGFA :Anapurna M

AGFA :Anapurna X and XL

AGFA :Dotrix

ColorSpan 5440uv series

ColorSpan 9840UV

Dilli Neo Deluxe

Dilli Neo Venus UVV-2506 (GW)

Durst Rho 205

Durst Rho 351R

Durst Rho 600

Durst Rho 600 Pictor

Durst Rho 800

Flora 1.8 meter UV

Fujifilm Acuity HD 2504

Gandinnovations JETi 1224 UV 4x8’ flatbed

Gandinnovations JETi 2030 UV 2x3 meters

Gandinnovations roll-fed UV

Gandinnovations Flatbed

GCC StellarJet 183uv

Gerber Solara UV2

Gerber ion Flatbed

Grapo Octopus

Grapo Manta

HP Designjet H35100 and HP Designjet H45100

HP-Scitex FB910 UV combo printer

HP Scitex XL2200

HP Scitex Vision FB6300

HP Scitex Vision FB6500

Inca Columbia Turbo

Inca Spyder 150

Inca Spyder 320

IP&I Cube 1606

IP&I Cube 260UV

Keundo SupraQ 3300 UV

Mimaki Flatbed JF-1631 & JF-1610

Mimaki UJF 605cII

NUR Tempo Q

NUR Expedio Inspiration

NUR Expedio 3200

NUR Expedio 5000 Revolution

Oce Arizona 250 GT

Raster Printers 720UVZ, Daytona T600 UV

Raster Printers Daytona T600UV flatbed

Sun NEO UV-LED

Teckwin TeckThunder

Teckwin Tecksmart UV 1600 and 2500 UV

Teckwin TeckStorm

Triangle Milano (Neolt)

Vutek 200/600

Vutek QS2000 and QS3200

Vutek QS3200r

Zund 250-combi

More complete list of all UV printers

After-Market Ink
RIPs
Media and Inks
Equipment
Scanners
Signs, Poster and Banners
Training & Books
Trade Shows
Lamination

Evaluation of Printers and Workflow for Fine Art Glic
 

During the rest of 2008, how will low-price Chinese, Taiwan, and Korean UV curable ink printers compare with HP ColorSpan, Gerber Solara, Durst Rho, Sericol Inca, NUR Tempo and Gandinnovations flatbeds?

Already UV curable flatbed ink printers are becoming more popular. Six years ago prices ranged from about $125,000 (basic Zund) to over $650,000 (sophisticated Durst Rho 160 or Sericol Inca Columbia Turbo). But Korean, Chinese, and Japanese companies already have beta prototypes of UV cured flatbed printers for under $60,000. Many of these models were presented at ISA tradeshow, April 2003 and more brands were shown at ISA 2004, such as SkyJet. But by 2005 prices were down to $75,000 for the ColorSpan 72UVR flatbed. Today, in 2008, Korean (IP&I, Dilli, etc), Taiwan (GCC), and Chinese (Teckwin) UV printers are offering improved quality.

In January 2004 Oce presented their Oce Arizona 60UV for under $40,000, chopping $100,000 off the price of their nearest competitor. Unfortunately, to get this price too many features had to be sacrificed. The printer failed to function to specs and was withdrawn. If you are shopping on price, be absolutely sure that you learn how the prices are calculated. Since FLAAR itself does not buy or sell UV printers we can reveal to you what actually happens when you see a low price and place your order. The price you end up with on your invoice may shock you. We explain all this.

NUR Tempo, Scitex Vision VEEJet, Leggett and Platt Virtu and VUTEk QS2000/QS3200 combo flatbeds now have stiff competition. Even American companies such as DJT, Digital Jet Technologies, are lowering prices to below $80,000 for their model DJT 400. But they failed also: never even showed a printer at a major trade show. What happened to all the people who made down payments?

Again, every low-priced printer has failed (it is not possible to put all the features into a UV-lamp printer, and have it function effectively or safely at these low prices). Again, be sure to get the FLAAR Reports on this aspect, so you can protect yourself in advance.

UV curable ink printer ISA 2003

What if you made a down payment, or bought an expensive flatbed from a company that goes belly up? And this was an American company, not a Chinese company. How do you know if the mainland Chinese printers are still in beta-stage? What about spare parts? Tech support in your part of the US or Canada ? Even Kodak was selling a printer that did not function (their infamous Kodak 5260). The CrystalJet was another example circa 1996-98. Million dollars of advertising blitz, but the printer did not function.

This is why people come to FLAAR to ask for assistance in what UV-curable ink flatbed to select.

If you are about to spend between $65,000 and $250,000 on a printer, you might wish to read the notes of Nicholas Hellmuth based on eight years of research. Even if you went to all those trade shows yourself, Professor Hellmuth offers tips and insights that a visitor to a trade show might not be aware of. Besides, the price of the FLAAR Reports is a pittance to invest if you are considering buying a UV curable printer. These reports are updated based on recent trade shows both in Europe and across the USA throughout 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, plus FLAAR has inspected the factories, demo rooms, R&D facilities, and world headquarters of NUR, ColorSpan, Dilli Precision, IP&I, Teckwin, GCC, GRAPO, Inca, Gandinnovations, and others.

Learn to recognize the differences among Chinese, Taiwanese, and Korean UV printers

We separate Chinese printers into several tiers, based on whether they are rudimentary and mere copies to the one or two brands that are noticeably better. UV printers from Taiwan are easier to handle since there is only one major manufacturer of UV printers there: GCC.

The four major Korean brands, which include Dilli Precision, IP&I, and two others, are all of comparable quality to printers made in the US and Europe at comparable price level. I have inspected the factories of Dilli and IP&I for several days at a time, and I have visited printshops that have IP&I printers in daily operation, such as the IP&I CUBE 260. Printers made in Korea (from the top brands) are closer in workmanship to printers made in Switzerland than to printers made in China.

There are two Korean factories that I have not yet visited (that of DYSS and Lotte). There is one third tier Korean company that is the only one comparable to other Asian factories. There is one further Korean manufacturer that is so new their products have not yet been announced.

All this information is in three separate reports:

  • one on all Chinese UV printers
  • one on all Korean UV printers
  • one on Taiwan UV printers

Order from wide-format-printers.net, the UV-curable ink flatbed Series from FLAAR now!

FLAAR now has more than nine series on UV-curable ink flatbed printers:

  • The original FLAAR Reports on UV wide format inkjet flatbeds

  • The updates after DRUPA trade show (May 2004 into 2008)

  • The additional updates after Photokina 2004, 2006, SGIA-GraphExpo-ISA (2004-2007)

  • All the new reports based on new UV flatbed inkjet technology during 2005, 2006, 2007)

Selected 2004-2007 reports are being updated one by one with fresh information we have gathered all during 2008.

You can also hire Dr Hellmuth as a consultant , to come and visit your screen printing shop, sign shop, photo lab, or other class of printing company. However it is quicker and easier to buy his reports via convenient download first.

 

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Most recently updated January 12, 2008.

Previously updated October 25, 2003 , after SGIA trade show. First posted May 12, 2003 ; updated June 25, 2003; updated March 20, 2004. Updated Nov 2, 2004, May 12, 2005 and June 24, 2005.

Most of our updates for summer 2008 onward are in FLAAR Reports in Adobe Acrobat PDF format. It is more efficient for us to make new information available in PDF format. So if the web page itself is not updated, check out www.wide-format-printers.NET to see if the printer, RIP, or other subject is covered in an update in a PDF download.
 
Any problem with this site please report it to webmaster, or if you note any error, omission, or have a different opinion on a review, please contact the review editor, ReaderService@FLAAR.org, or find out how to meet Nicholas Hellmuth and speak with him personally. © 2001-2008 FLAAR