Comment So I've heard. (Score 1) 505
Anecdotal evidence is the best kind of evidence so I've been told.
Anecdotal evidence is the best kind of evidence so I've been told.
...might be to use your supplier/toner provider's recycling program and when the life cycle of the printer is up, to potentially switch to a solid ink printer instead.
I started to migrate the old company (80 offices) I worked for over to the Xerox Phaser series when we decommissioned old equipment or built a new office (the 7750, 85XX, and 88XX are the models I'm most familiar with). The toner is paraffin wax shaped blocks and dye. Almost next to no packaging and what is there is recyclable.
When we started experimenting with new printers (especially so with the solid ink), we borrowed a unit from the local distributor and tested it in our department for a week to make sure it would meet the basic requirements, then moved it to a more demanding group in the office to see if they approved. Our metric weighed in the factors of base cost of the printer, cost/page (which factors in supplies and average maintenance over a set lifetime), quality of print, efficiency of volumes of jobs, and other day to day tasks.
If anyone else want's to know more about our testing and long term use, let me know and I can give a more detailed breakdown.
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If your company is dead set on the soy toner, have your printer/toner supplier track down some samples to try out on a few printers and see how they work.
E = MC ** 2 +- 3db