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Posted 20 hours ago

50 Sheets A4 200gsm White Card - Premium Thick Printing Paper Suitable for All Printers

£9.9£99Clearance
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The 300gsm on this machine is actually rated for photo papers as opposed to card but some customers do use it for card as well. It depends on your budget as well because other alternatives would be our pro photo machines – https://www.printerbase.co.uk/other-devices/photo-printer/high-quality-photo-printers.html The max rated paper weight for Epson non-pro models is 256gsm photo papers. Anything over 256gsm is usually reserved for their range of professional photo printers only, such as the P400, P600 and P800 models. Im after an inkjet printer to print cards, all i have used struggle feeding in, i was hoping for a HP one but if not can you advice on the cheapest inkjet that will very happily take 250g card. The Canon G650 can print photo’s great but it has max support of 105gsm. We would not recommend this for Card Printing.

Could you please help us to get Samsung printer which has the capability of printing below specified certificate Hi I am looking for a reasonably priced printer that i can use with printing onto up to 300 to 350 gsm being that l am a card maker The weight range of standard office paper, used in your desktop laser printer or photocopier and would rarely be used for brochures. I’m glad to hear you’re finding use in our posts and I’m sorry to hear your save-the-dates were cancelled.I had an IT technician have a look at it, for free, yesterday and it’s def’ a goner, as if it had only been the paper jam bar that needed replacing, he could have found me a new one, But the mechanism on the right hand side has gone too. When you are just starting out in the world of papercrafts, all of the terms and jargon can be super overwhelming. A common question from newbies is: “What is GSM for paper?”. Fortunately, we have all the answers in this GSM paper guide. Learn exactly how to choose the right GSM and the right paper for your needs

You asked and we listened, our Great Printers For Printing On Card Post has been updated with the latest and greatest models. This A4 Ryman Card is suitable for most types of printers, including inkjet, copier and laser machines and due to its weight is perfect for printing invitations, certificates, menus and other documents that require a light weight card. A2 – 420 x 594 mm, or 16.54 x 23.39 in – Used for smaller posters, maps, or diagrams. ISO B Paper Sizes and MeasurementsThank you for getting in touch. We don’t have a printer we could recommend for the size of prints you’re doing. It’s advised to use an A4 sheet of paper and cutting it down to reach this size. The majority of printers can only handle a maximum of 250gsm. There are some exceptions such as the Pro photo machines, but you can also print onto media up to 300gsm with the Canon iX6850 – https://www.printerbase.co.uk/canon-pixma-ix6850-a3-colour-inkjet-printer.html This is a much cheaper option than the pro photo devices.

The Brother T420 isn’t available in the UK at the moment so information is limited. From what we’re seeing, the minimum GSM support is 80, this could be what causes the feed issues. I don’t know if you can help me, i’m looking for a low cost printer that can take 250gsm card maybe even 280gsm. I mainly print in mono so i was thinking about a laser printer but they’re either really expensive or massive, and tend to make the card curl (do they all do that?). I’m currently using an HP deskjet 2130 but it’s a bit unpredictable and the quality isn’t the best. Using the recommended paper weight has a good impact on a printer and quality of the final print job. The effects of not doing so range from bad quality prints to printer damage. High on the list of issues is “paper jam”, which then evolves into multiple other issues with varying error codes and messages on your printer. Below are some examples of the maximum GSM recommended for the most common printing scenarios.Hello! Im looking for a laser printer that can handle 280/300gsm paper and that has a really good photo/graphics quality printing, as I would be printing kids birthday invitations mostly. GSM isn’t the only way to measure the weight of paper. There are a few other systems that use different standards and measurements, which are used in different parts of the world: 1. Caliper

On the other hand, flyers promoting a sale or event are usually disposable, hence why they’re made from the lightest, flimsiest low-GSM paper.I have bought a Kyocera Ecosys M5521 and discovered that has a simplex ADF (a crap that takes one side) and prints ok on 220gsm card only the text but the images doesn’t. For this standard, the weight of various types of paper is measured from a sample sheet cut to one square meter in size. No matter the length or width the paper becomes, the weight measurement is always taken from the square meter sheet. A top recommendation is currently the ET-8550: https://www.printerbase.co.uk/epson-ecotank-et-8550-a3-multifunction-inkjet-printer.html due to the low running costs and support on heavy media – but this would be slower to print. For media at this weight we do recommend looking at an Inkjet Printer. My top current recommendation is the canon IP8750 gsm – The weight of your average promotional poster. Think movie posters hanging on a teenager’s bedroom walls or product posters hanging in store windows.

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