• remer@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I know brother makes tank printers but I’m not familiar with those models specifically. Every printer recommendation I’ve seen over that last few years is firmly pointed at brother. That’s a great starting point.

    • tj111@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I have a 15 year old laser brother printer that is still humming along, I think I’ve replaced the toner twice in that time (I’m not a frequent printer). Going forward it’s the only brand I’ll buy.

    • hello_cruel_world@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      In my experience those posts are full of comments like " had my brother printer coming up 200 years, they’re solid!"

      Thats all very well and good for line of printers brother were selling 200 years ago, but what are they like now? I have heard everything from “they’re essentially the same” to “brother has sold out” so now I don’t know what to think, and £500 is a lot to drop on something they might just be as bad as HP or Epsom.

  • Followupquestion@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Do you need color? Do you need scanning beyond using a scanner app from your iPhone (I use Scanner Pro and it’s worth every penny)? You may be okay with a really good B&W laser, ik which case I can more than recommend a Brother. That said, if you need color, I recently bought a Brother color laser printer and no joke, it’s a tank.

    It’s not a multifunction printer but when I unboxed it, it weighed noticeably more than the multifunction color laser printer it replaced. Five months in, it’s quick, quiet, and I have no regrets spending the extra money over an Epson inkjet or a lesser laser printer. Oh, and it does duplex, so I use less paper. I legitimately think the case of paper I bought a couple of years ago is the last printer paper I’ll ever buy, and I expect this printer might be the same.

  • MetalAirship@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’ve started buying printers from the thrift store - my local Goodwill had a few. I got a wireless printer for $15 and ink for it for another $10. So for $25 I now have a functioning wireless printer, and at that price I can excuse DRM stuff since I’m still way ahead of buying even the most consumer-friendly new one