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World's Fastest Inkjet Printer?

An anonymous reader writes "Brother Industries has just demonstrated what they say is the world's fastest inkjet printer. The prototype uses a revolutionary new static head array to achieve amazing speeds of around 150 full colour pages per minute."

6 of 355 comments (clear)

  1. Drivers by Dorf+on+Perl · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Does it have a Linux driver? Yeah, Canon, I'm looking at you.

  2. And yet... by theGreater · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...to prove how insanely great the print quality is on this thing, the author of said article provides a very lossy jpeg scan as evidence. Having said that, if they can get 600x600 at > 100 PPM, I'm all in.

    -theGreater.
  3. Non-moving print heads... by DigitalRaptor · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Now if the hard drive industry would just put some thought into non-moving heads...

    I've thought for years that a series of heads side by side, with code and logic to read sequentially or simultaneously would drastically improve hard drive performance, while reducing hardware failures.

    Almost every time I have a hard drive die it's because of failed heads. Since using UPS's I haven't had a single fried board.

    --
    Lose Weight and Feel Great with Isagenix
  4. How are they going to dry those pages? by cplusplus · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Okay, 150ppm for A6. How wet are those pages? And A6 is a very small piece of paper (about 1/4 the surface area of 8.5x11). My guess is that if you wanted a somewhat dry, smear proof 8.5x11 piece of paper, the speed of that Brother printer would be at most 30-40ppm (which is still fast for ink!).

    --
    "False hope is why we'll never run out of natural resources!" - Lewis Black
  5. Re:time-space tradeoff by graphicsguy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It may be possible to set up a continuous ink system . I know, for example, that inksupply.com offers continuous flow ink systems that use some tube connections to feed the cartridge directly from bottles of ink. (but they currently only support Epson)

  6. Can the connection to the printer keep up? by csimpkin · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I wonder if the connection (I assume usb 2.0) can handle 150 full color photos in a minute. The article indicated that the demo printed 150 copies of the same photo. So, it only had to send one photo to the printer. I could see printing photo albums with this, but that is a lot of data to send to the printer.