Best Durable Printer

crashtech

Lifer
Jan 4, 2013
10,532
2,117
146
I keep going through printers. HP, Brother, Epson, mostly inkjets but once tried a laser, none of them last. The laser was too affected by the omnipresent dust here I think. Odlly enough the inkjets rarely have feed problems like you would think from dust, they mainly just have ink, printhead, or software problems. All I want is a printer that is durable, the ability to scan and copy as well would be greatly appreciated but maybe not essential, as my crappy Epson still retains the ability to scan documents and I could keep it for that purpose. It doesn't even need to be color.

Ugh, just sick of crappy printers. It's like I ought to buy them in bulk and have a stack in back to replace them every six months as they die. We're not even printing that much, maybe 20 pages a day on average. We've always used desktop all-in-ones, but at this point I'll try anything. Desktop would be most convenient though.

Price is secondary at this point, but if I spend $1000 on a printer that still only lasts a year, I think I might go postal.
 

corkyg

Elite Member | Peripherals
Super Moderator
Mar 4, 2000
27,370
238
106
IMHO, part of the problem is that stand alone printers are becoming a rarity, and the integration of functions into AIO machines creates compromises and complexities that lower the end product reliability and lifespan.
 
  • Like
Reactions: PliotronX

mxnerd

Diamond Member
Jul 6, 2007
6,799
1,101
126
It's been many years that printers have become disposable, the quality is just not there, what you describe is not a joke, it's a fact.

All printer manufacturers want is to sell more printers and ink cartridges, they don't want the printers to last forever,

just see how many different cartridge models each manufacturer have and how expensive they are!
 
Last edited:

Mike64

Platinum Member
Apr 22, 2011
2,108
101
91
Which laser died the early death, and just how dusty is your environment? Do you do anything even as minor as throwing a piece of cloth or plastic over it when it's not in active use?

My Brother HL-2140 is still going strong and it's somewhere between 7-10 years old (long enough that I honestly don't remember exactly how long I've had it.) And the prior wireless/networkable version I had only died (prematurely) when I very stupidly pushed the toner cartridge way past its nominal end-of-life using the electric-tape-over-the-sensor trick... I have seen a lot of reviews that collectively imply that Brother's current bottom-of-the-line model (the "new" HL-2140) isn't as durable as the one I have, so I think there's probably some truth to mxnerd's comment, but the reviews I've seen of the next model or two up from the bottom all still seem pretty good.
 
  • Like
Reactions: paperfist

mxnerd

Diamond Member
Jul 6, 2007
6,799
1,101
126
Actually I was talking about inkjet printers. Brother laser is durable in my opinion.
 

Mike64

Platinum Member
Apr 22, 2011
2,108
101
91
Actually I was talking about inkjet printers. Brother laser is durable in my opinion.
Oh, yeah, that, definitely. I have no experience with expensive, "high end" inkjets, but at least the cheaper ones (≤ $50± on sale) have all been complete crap for a while now. One advantage of urban living is that local photo/color printing is readily available nearby at any time of day (or even night, at the cost of short-ish subway ride), so I haven't felt any real desire, much less "need", for an inkjet in a very long time. (I wouldn't mind having one that can handle oddly-shaped cardstock well, but that's the sort of whim that passes quickly enough after an hour of fruitless web-searching for reviews that even touch on that usage, especially since I wouldn't be willing to spend Real Money for one...)
 
Last edited:

crashtech

Lifer
Jan 4, 2013
10,532
2,117
146
Well, I do appreciate all the replies. I have decided to buy an OEM drum and toner for the Brother HL-L2360DW that's stashed in the closet. Maybe a cover and a routine maintenance schedule will make the Brother into what I'm looking for. I'll just have to use the crappy Epson to scan stuff onto the PC and print from there to make copies, which is probably okay since that function isn't needed often.
 

mxnerd

Diamond Member
Jul 6, 2007
6,799
1,101
126
Those crappy inkjet AIO printers still need you have ink in all cartridges to be able to scan, that sucks! If you have any color cartridge dries out, you can't do anything with the printer.!
 

crashtech

Lifer
Jan 4, 2013
10,532
2,117
146
If that turns out to be the case, I'll have to go back to having a dedicated scanner. Maybe one of those little sheetfed ones to save space.
 

sdifox

No Lifer
Sep 30, 2005
95,223
15,238
126
I got rid of an old HP LaserJet 4Si a year ago. It was still working, but it was too slow.

Been running a Brother MFC-8480DN since 2011. On third 8k page toner, first toner was only 1k pages I think.

You have to look at the monthly duty cycle, the higher the number the better built the printer.
 
Last edited:

rchunter

Senior member
Feb 26, 2015
933
72
91
I've had pretty good luck with xerox printers. Both solid ink and color lasers. I've had my phaser 8560 for a really long time.
 

sdifox

No Lifer
Sep 30, 2005
95,223
15,238
126
I've had pretty good luck with xerox printers. Both solid ink and color lasers. I've had my phaser 8560 for a really long time.


Solid ink only makes sense on high duty cycle. Otherwise you end up with a lot of wasted energy and ink.
 

crashtech

Lifer
Jan 4, 2013
10,532
2,117
146
Update, I did get the Brother laser working by changing the drum with an OE unit, and it has a cardboard box over it now to keep the dust at bay. Working on a less ghetto solution, but since it's still in the back, most people don't see it. The Epson got all new ink, I think the knock-off tanks might have been part of the problem. The print quality is still shit, so it probably needs a manual print head cleaning or a new print head, which I found out requires tools on the model I have. WTH, Epson, why can't the print head pop out like every other printer I've had? Anyway, it will still scan, and copy well enough for most internal uses, so I'm in business, for now.
 

rchunter

Senior member
Feb 26, 2015
933
72
91
Solid ink only makes sense on high duty cycle. Otherwise you end up with a lot of wasted energy and ink.

Yeah maybe so but I print a lot anyway. I keep it on a ups in sleep mode when i'm not using it. I hardly ever power it off so it doesn't waste a lot of ink. I know you're really not supposed to keep these printers on ups's but I do anyway and it's been fine for a long time.
 

sdifox

No Lifer
Sep 30, 2005
95,223
15,238
126
Yeah maybe so but I print a lot anyway. I keep it on a ups in sleep mode when i'm not using it. I hardly ever power it off so it doesn't waste a lot of ink. I know you're really not supposed to keep these printers on ups's but I do anyway and it's been fine for a long time.

no it is the constant going on off sleep cycle that east power and ink. it has to warm up the fuser every time it awakens from sleep and it goes through print head cleaning as well, which will use up some ink. but if you print batches then it is not a big deal.
 

rchunter

Senior member
Feb 26, 2015
933
72
91
no it is the constant going on off sleep cycle that east power and ink. it has to warm up the fuser every time it awakens from sleep and it goes through print head cleaning as well, which will use up some ink. but if you print batches then it is not a big deal.

I haven't noticed that with this. Mainly when I power cycle the printer it eats ink like crazy. That's why i've kept it on a ups.
 

bruceb

Diamond Member
Aug 20, 2004
8,874
111
106
I have an HP Officejet 7410 and for the most part it is doing fine. I have a spare part for the ADF Feeder and sometimes, I get an error when trying to use the Scanner ... I think something with the scanner lamp motor or belt is causing it. They come up on Ebay now and then and could be changed without too much work. But when it dies (and I run out of existing ink cartridges (have some in the printer and another set) then I would consider the HP Officejet Pro 7740 .. It uses individual ink tanks and can be found for around $200 ... but this thing is huge and weighs a lot. Bonus: It can do 11 x 17 paper
 

Chaotic42

Lifer
Jun 15, 2001
33,929
1,098
126
I bought my Brother HL-2270DW in 2004 and not only is it still going strong, but I've never changed out its ink. I've printed a whole lot of stuff and it just keeps going. This thing is a beast.
 

sdifox

No Lifer
Sep 30, 2005
95,223
15,238
126
I bought my Brother HL-2270DW in 2004 and not only is it still going strong, but I've never changed out its ink. I've printed a whole lot of stuff and it just keeps going. This thing is a beast.


You don't print enough. My wife is an accountant and she goes through print like crazy.
 

sdifox

No Lifer
Sep 30, 2005
95,223
15,238
126
I mean, I print a fair amount. I'm just a single guy who prints random crap for school and whatnot. It's black-and-white too, so it's not like it tears through the ink.


We are on high yield toner (8k) number 3 and the printer came with a starter 1k toner.

The printer's recommended duty cycle is 3500 page per month. Max cycle is 30000 pages.
 
Last edited:

meerza

Junior Member
Jan 15, 2018
11
0
1
Try Samsung Xpress M2020W, it is a monochrome laser printer, should last better as compared to others.
 

GEOrifle

Senior member
Oct 2, 2005
806
5
81
Epson Inkjet printers, i got Stylus Color 830 more than 8 years and works perfectly, ink is affordable (buying refills).
Just don't forget : If you want ink to last DON'T SHUT DOWN THE POWER, KEEP IT AT STAND BY MODE EVERY-TIME !!!!