Replacing a Canon printer with a Brother Laser?

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Replacing a Canon printer with a Brother Laser?

Home Forums The Tea Room Replacing a Canon printer with a Brother Laser?

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  • #36354
    mark costello 1
    Participant
      @markcostello1
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      #538066
      mark costello 1
      Participant
        @markcostello1

        I am thinking of replacing My Canon printer with a Brother Laser printer, need black only. Experience or advice wanted. Better brand? Comments?

        #538071
        Mark Huskie
        Participant
          @markhuskie41991
          Posted by mark costello 1 on 04/04/2021 20:47:08:

          I am thinking of replacing My Canon printer with a Brother Laser printer, need black only. Experience or advice wanted. Better brand? Comments?

          Good evening,

          I replaced my HP laser with a Brother BW laser because the HP was always losing the wifi connection, since then I have been very happy with the Brother, no lost connections, good print and fairly priced consumables,

          Best wishes, Mark

          #538088
          AJAX
          Participant
            @ajax

            Twenty years ago I was actively involved in purchasing and servicing networked and personal printers. At that time (not sure about nowadays) HP were generally more reliable than Canon and Epson.

            About 3 years ago I bought an HP LaserJet P2055DN laser printer at a car boot sale. I paid just one pound for the printer, including a part-used toner cartridge. This is a duplex capable printer (it can print both sides), has a wired network interface (easily connected to your wifi-enabled home router) and cheap refilled toner cartridges are widely available. It took me about a year or two and several reams of paper to exhaust the "free" toner cartridge. A refilled cartridge purchased from Amazon was smudgy for the first dozen pages but has been perfect since. I've printed several more reams of paper but the toner keeps going. The printer has never jammed.

            HP workgroup-sized printers such as mine are generally easy to service and all parts including feed rollers and new fuser units are available at reasonable prices. If mine irreparably failed tomorrow I would have no hesitation buying another used one, even if I had to pay £30 – 80.

            #538093
            Frances IoM
            Participant
              @francesiom58905

              the HP comments tie in their computer offerings – business oriented models very good – consumer oriented be wary and make sure you have a long bargepole. There was a decision by a now departed CEO to race to the bottom in the consumer market

              #538099
              HOWARDT
              Participant
                @howardt

                I use a Samsung colour laser at the moment and had an Epson before that, both have performed as expected. My daughter has a mono Brother laser with Wi-fi that I bought for £85 from Curry’s the Christmas before last, now priced around £130, she finds it ideal for her use as a school teacher. Recently found a good supplier of remanufactured cartridges, a cloud set for mine around £50, mono for daughter £12. At the price they beat inkjet hands down.

                #538100
                Mike Hurley
                Participant
                  @mikehurley60381

                  I used to support 100s of various Brother printers where I worked, and generally they were OK, didn't give too much trouble and consumables reasonable £.

                  As a consequence, when I retired, bought a modesly priced one (cobined scanner, printer etc) for home use, and it's been pants.Assume they're built to a low price for home users hoping to get the £ back with the 'proper' branded consumables.

                  Regrads

                  #538107
                  An Other
                  Participant
                    @another21905

                    Consider your computer operating system. I had to dump a Brother Laser printer because it was not well supported for use with Linux – it did work, but much of the functionality was lost. Brother did not provide a LInux driver, only for Windows and Apple

                    #538116
                    Gibbo568
                    Participant
                      @gibbo568

                      I recently changed my failing HP all in one inkjet.

                      I bought a Brother dcpl 3550, all in one laser, which is fully supported in Linux, (with drivers from Brother), so far I'm happy with it.

                      #538120
                      SillyOldDuffer
                      Moderator
                        @sillyoldduffer

                        I replaced a Canon Colour printer with a Brother Laser because the Canon used more ink cleaning nozzles than printing on paper, and because most of my printing is text, not photographs!

                        Domestic Inkjets work best printing several colour photographs at a time, and the way I used mine to print occasional one-offs is highly wasteful, even if it didn't gum up entirely. Although they print black text, the way it's done isn't ideal. Whilst too high-tech precision to be made in a home-workshop the printing mechanism is designed down to a price, isn't repairable, and the profit is all in the ink. Much of the printer functionality may be in the software driver, not the hardware, making installing the right driver essential. Ink cartridges are often brainy too, making them difficult to refill, and capable of ignoring the owner! Inkjets are fussy about paper weight and porosity. I suspect all this makes them a poor match to most ordinary user requirements, apart from the purchase price!

                        Office and print-shop printers are robustly designed the other way round. Their goal is reliable low-cost high-volume printing. Purchase price is high, but the price per page is low. Again, these are a poor match to ordinary user requirements because few of us print enough to justify the initial purchase price. Approach second-hand printers of this type with caution because they have a hard-life and may be beyond economic repair or in need of unobtainable spare-parts.

                        Apart from not doing colour, black and white laser printers are excellent for home use. They don't waste ink, don't mind occasional low-volume use, usually work with a standard interface rather than needing proprietary drivers, they're not fussy about paper, and consumables (per page) are cheap. They also print much faster than Inkjets.

                        My Brother Laser is a HL1212-W. No problems whatever with it, and, once authenticated by the router (press two buttons), Wifi printing worked out of the box with Windows 7, Windows 10, 3 different Linux distributions, Apple and Android. It's for moderate domestic or Small Office use; I wouldn't recommend it for anything more strenuous because it's too lightly built. (At work, equivalent A4 laser printers supporting 10 to 20 users each, were at least twice the size…)

                        Can I remind chaps it's best not to leap to conclusions based on brand-names? Brand-names don't guarantee good or bad. Here, Canon, Brother, Epsom, HP, and the others are pretty much in the same game, each making a range of printers from cheap and cheerful to professional grade. That Brother makes disappointing Inkjets doesn't mean their entire range is rubbish, and be aware the Hewlett Packard of 20 years ago was a different firm. In the 1990s HP only made high-end kit (really good stuff). Today, under new ownership, HP sell everything from low-end domestic to high-grade industrial printers, and major in services, not manufacturing. The model and technology used by a printer, coupled with its software support and price-point, are more important than the brand.

                        Dave

                        #538123
                        Nick Clarke 3
                        Participant
                          @nickclarke3
                          Posted by An Other on 05/04/2021 09:36:28:

                          Consider your computer operating system. I had to dump a Brother Laser printer because it was not well supported for use with Linux – it did work, but much of the functionality was lost. Brother did not provide a LInux driver, only for Windows and Apple

                          When I stated my present job nearly 11 years ago there were two Brother printers in my room, a mono and a colour both two or three years old and they would still be in use now if it were not for the fact that while Win 10 drivers for both to run connected to a computer are still available, the Win 10 .bin files needed to connect them to a dedicated printer server on a network have not been produced for these old models.

                          I can't really blame Brother for this as I doubt that many commercial enterprises would be still trying to run 12 or more year old printers in a networked environment!

                          I cannot comment on today's Brother printers, but comparing those I have seen there is a conceptual difference between them and comparable HP models. A HP toner contains the drum and so is a more expensive replacement than the Brother system of separate drums and toners (and belts in colour models.)

                          The Brother cartridge for the mon printer is about £80 (genuine – recycled are cheaper) and the drum about £150(ditto) while the equivalent HP for a similar specced machine we have at work is £120. You get a new drum each time but you don't need to change this every time you run out of toner on the Brother. I a nutshell running costs would be cheaper for the Brother but for one thing – You can shake up an HP cartridge until there is no toner left after the message to replace it has appeared and it will continue to produce prints until nothing is printed – long enough to order a replacement. The Brothers have page counters and will stop printing when it thinks the toner has printed enough – or the drum has printed enough or waste toner bottle has collected enough or a belt (in a colour printer) has printed enough. While some of these can be reset you cannot reset the toners cartridge(s) and when recycling them they are clearly not empty.

                          For work I would use Brothers again, but my mono printer at home is HP running genuine cartridges as I get a new drum every time that way. If I wanted a colour Laser I might go for a Brother at home as well – we'll see.

                          All laser printers are cheaper to run than the alternatives, but the individual cost of toners is higher at each replacement than for an inkjet printer – so when it runs out you have to find £100 or so which may be harder than finding £5 more often

                          Edited By Nick Clarke 3 on 05/04/2021 10:27:32

                          #538128
                          Kiwi Bloke
                          Participant
                            @kiwibloke62605

                            My Brother HL-2250DN duplex mono laser replaced a HP LaserJet 4. The LaserJet was a serious bit of kit, but its power supply failed, and it was slow, and probably didn't have enough internal memory. It was, however, free…

                            The Bro feels like a disposable plastic toy in comparison, but it works perfectly, and talks Linux. It cost about as much as one of its toner cartridges, so you can see where the manufacturers make their money. Two-sided printing is a valuable feature, and didn't add much to the cost.

                            #538150
                            AJAX
                            Participant
                              @ajax
                              Posted by Kiwi Bloke on 05/04/2021 10:49:44:

                              My Brother HL-2250DN duplex mono laser replaced a HP LaserJet 4. The LaserJet was a serious bit of kit, but its power supply failed, and it was slow, and probably didn't have enough internal memory. It was, however, free…

                              The Bro feels like a disposable plastic toy in comparison, but it works perfectly, and talks Linux. It cost about as much as one of its toner cartridges, so you can see where the manufacturers make their money. Two-sided printing is a valuable feature, and didn't add much to the cost.

                              Agreed – duplex printing is a very handy feature – especially when printing multi page documents. Many secondhand workgroup laser printers like mine will have that feature (D), plus a network (N) interface too.

                              #538165
                              Ex contributor
                              Participant
                                @mgnbuk

                                I bought a Brother mono laser printer (not 3-in-1) when it was on a Bank Holiday offer from PC World (less than £60 with a newspaper coupon IIRC ).

                                It was fast to start up, fast to print & decent quality. The "starter" toner cartridge didn't last long & a replacement was almost as much as the printer. This didn't get used up, as another part that the toner cartridge mounted on died, giving longitudinal lines down the page & this part cost more than the printer did, so it went for recyling and was not replaced. I don't think I had much over 2 years use out of it, so not really a bargain.

                                So back to an inexpensive Canon 3-in-1 inkjet for me – Canon because the print head is built in to the cartridge & they don't seem to be plagued by the terminal print head blockages that afflict Epson printers. Yes genuine cartridges are pricier as you buy the print head every time, but I use less than a pair a year & it always prints fine regardless of how long it is left between prints.

                                Work tried moving from a Brother 3-in-1 A3 inket to a Brother colour laser printer as business increased & the initial inket unit died – again great while it lasted, but then the main pcb failed just after it had had a full set of cartridges fitted (over £100 + Vat there) &as it was out of warranty it was scrapped. We run 2 of the Brother A3 inkjets now, using pattern cartridges, they last over 5 years in a busy office environment before dying and are a lot cheaper to buy than the laser. Duplex printing machines, with auto document feed on the scanner & two paper trays that we keep set as one on A3 and the other on A4. Better photo reproduction from the inkjets than from the colour laser, if that matters to you.

                                Nigel B.

                                #538167
                                Paul Lousick
                                Participant
                                  @paullousick59116

                                  My Brother MFC-L2700 printer/scanner/copier is about 7 years old. It has duplex printing, scanning and WIFI. I use 3rd party toner cartridges which are reasonably priced. Lost count of the number of pages printed but estimate about 20 – 30 thousand.

                                  #538188
                                  Anonymous

                                    Just to point out that this isn't "either-or". You can have more than one printer. Perhaps ridiculously, I have:

                                    -HP B/W laser all-in-one (the main workhorse)

                                    – HP inkjet large format all-in-one. Great for making 17 or 18 inch prints for the shop … perhaps more importantly it has a scanner size to match which has been unbelievably useful at times.

                                    – Canon basic inkjet with refillable tanks. (purchased a bit hastily when the Canon  below died).

                                    – A now resurrected WiFi Canon all-in-one inkjet with refillable tanks. Repaired after the waste ink counter triggered (see other thread).

                                     

                                    This collection sort of "grew like Topsey" over the years – I don't suggest it for everyone – but for decades I've had both inkjet and laser machines.

                                     

                                     

                                     

                                     

                                    Edited By Peter Greene on 05/04/2021 16:21:34

                                    #538190
                                    jaCK Hobson
                                    Participant
                                      @jackhobson50760

                                      i got a second hand brother 5240L so I could do the 'Shaun Hughes laser printer hack' to disable the heat element so you can make laser printed transfers for layouts – good for engraving but maybe it would work on a larger scale? Unfortunately I've found having a laser printer so useful I haven't got around to hakking.

                                      Edited By jaCK Hobson on 05/04/2021 16:29:50

                                      #538191
                                      Grindstone Cowboy
                                      Participant
                                        @grindstonecowboy

                                        Re blocked print heads, I have had great success (on an Epson) using one of the cleaning kits available on Ebay – you basically squirt cleaning liquid through the heads, one at a time, via a syringe and a bit of rubber tube (after putting a carefully folded bit of kitchen roll beneath the head to catch the resulting horrible mess).

                                        And the aftermarket ink cartridges seem to work well enough for my purposes – although they throw up an error message stating non-genuine cartridges have been installed, this can be dismissed.

                                        Rob

                                        #538197
                                        Dr. MC Black
                                        Participant
                                          @dr-mcblack73214

                                          My printer stopped working so I tried to replace it with a mono laser.

                                          I contacted various purveyors of printers asking what would work with an Apple Mac running OS 10.6.8

                                          None could be bothered to help – and consequently lost my business.

                                          Any suggestions please?

                                          MC

                                          #538203
                                          Anonymous

                                            I'd have assumed that all major laser printer manufacturers would have Mac drivers.

                                            Couldn't you just go to their support sites and look for the drivers to check?

                                            #538210
                                            Dr. MC Black
                                            Participant
                                              @dr-mcblack73214

                                              Thank you for taking the time to respond.

                                              If a firm wants to sell me a printer, I would want the salesman (who will be getting commission on the sale) to do the research and tell me which models will work with my computer.

                                              When I have risked looking, every model on which I checked required an Operating System much later than the one that I have.

                                              Both my GP and a Consultant orthopaedic surgeon have strongly advised me to minimise computer use as a response to a physiological problem about which I have consulted them.

                                              I can just about cope (by using specialist software) with brief communications such as this; anything more than that – like badly designed web sites – has unpredictable consequences.

                                              MCB

                                              #538880
                                              Nigel Graham 2
                                              Participant
                                                @nigelgraham2

                                                A point to question in choosing a 3-in-1 printer.

                                                Verify the claimed paper size!

                                                An HP Deskjet 1510 handles most of my printing, and both its scanner and printer do handle A4 as claimed.

                                                Its main drawback is that it won't take pattern and refilled cartridges. If I try, it accuses me of fitting counterfeits and although it goes through the motions, it will not put ink on paper.

                                                I purchased an HP OfficeJet 7510, mainly for CAD work but also to copy a lot of A3 originals.

                                                Unfortunately its packaging and advertising proved deceitful. It will print A3 sheets as claimed, but not scan up to that size. Nor is it is just the swept area that is under-size: an A3 sheet overhangs the copier glass in both directions.

                                                I do not know how general such failings are among the main makes and models of printers, but it is evidently one to watch for.

                                                '

                                                It is also very difficult to know what printed sizes these machines will actually give from a CAD screen image. Though it's probably as much my fault as its, I do not expect genuine full-size or integer-scale drawings on ISO-standard paper, in inches or mm, with correct dimensions; when printing combines Microsoft, Hewlett-Packard and IMSI Design equipment and software that all default to old, USA-only, paper sizes.

                                                #538890
                                                Anonymous
                                                  Posted by Nigel Graham 2 on 09/04/2021 17:27:40:

                                                  Its main drawback is that it won't take pattern and refilled cartridges. If I try, it accuses me of fitting counterfeits and although it goes through the motions, it will not put ink on paper.

                                                   

                                                  Could be wrong but I thought they made it illegal years ago for printer manufacturers to do that (block printing with third party cartridges). Or perhaps that was just this side of the pond.

                                                  It also seems odd to me that the printer would flag refilled cartridges but continue to go through the motions of printing with them while surpressing the ink flow. Are you sure you properly unsealed the cartridges?

                                                  In any event, my HP laser suddenly started nagging me about my refilled cartridge a while back …. but not refusing to print. Just a nuisance to have to cancel the nag each time. I finally discovered that I could turn off these warnings in the printer properties.

                                                  Perhaps there is something similar in your case?

                                                   

                                                  BTW "USA only" should read "North America only" (and for all i Know, South America) …. and we think your paper sizes are funny too wink

                                                  Edited By Peter Greene on 09/04/2021 18:50:14

                                                  #538909
                                                  Andy Stopford
                                                  Participant
                                                    @andystopford50521

                                                    I have a Brother HL-3150CDW colour laser printer and I'd certainly recommend it. It works well, is quite robustly made (it would be OK for light business use), and you can refill the toner cartridges:

                                                    https://www.urefilltoner.co.uk/

                                                    After printing 1071 A4 pages (assorted monochrome text, colour images, etc), it has 20% of the colour toners remaining and I've refilled the black toner once (fairly recently). As the above website explains, you can get some extra mileage out of them just by resetting the cartridge – I haven't done that with the colour ones yet, with the black one, I added some toner while the cartridge was out of the machine to be reset.

                                                    There's an easy-to-use Linux driver installer on the Brother website – don't try to do it the hard way (says the voice of experience).

                                                    #538919
                                                    Oldiron
                                                    Participant
                                                      @oldiron
                                                      Posted by Nigel Graham 2 on 09/04/2021 17:27:40:

                                                      Its main drawback is that it won't take pattern and refilled cartridges. If I try, it accuses me of fitting counterfeits and although it goes through the motions, it will not put ink on paper.

                                                      This should help. regards

                                                      From inkntoner website:-

                                                      How to turn off HP Cartridge Protection Setting!

                                                      You can turn off the HP cartridge protection setting in a few simple steps.

                                                      If your Hewlett-Packard printer does not have any internet features you can simply go into your printer settings which can be located on your printer menu and you will see the option to disable the HP cartridge protection. Just select the disable option and click Apply and Save if necessary.

                                                      If your printer has internet features:

                                                      1. Open up a web browser and enter your printer’s IP address on the web address. Your printer’s IP address can be found on your printer settings by navigating your way to network setup options.
                                                      2. This will open up the printer’s Embedded Web Server, click on the Settings option and to the left hand side select HP Cartridge Protection.
                                                      3. Make sure you select Disable HP Cartridge Protection and click Apply or Save.

                                                      Edited By Oldiron on 09/04/2021 21:49:01

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