DerekFME wrote:
I'd probably not get near 2000 a year but speed is a reasonable issue and being able to print on paper that isn't super special coated glossy stuff to avoid being soaking wet... Also quality isn't really an issue.
I've worked at Konica Minolta and Lexmark and have experience with Canon and Samsung devices - but generally only the big office copiers, not smaller units and certainly not stinkjets, as they're hilariously* known in our trade.
A colour laser is naturally going to be faster and more economical than an inkjet, but slower and less economical than a mono laser. They're also often noisy buggers. There are all sorts of engines and methods out there, but the vast majority of colour lasers have 4 print heads and 4 image drums in order to generate the image (built up with a mix of cyan, magenta, yellow and black toner). Therefore, colour lasers are much larger than their mono counterparts to house all the internal gubbins and there's more that can go wrong. Also, depending on the engine design, some colour lasers use a little cyan, magenta and yellow even when printing grayscale or black only images. Still, mostly these things are pretty reliable.
HP seem to have a solid reputation, but I've never worked with them myself. I quite like what I've seen of Samsung's devices, but everyone tells me they're awful. They're new to the industry though and seem to be improving all the time. Lexmark's mono lasers are pretty good I think, but I was never too sure about their colour jobbies.
I'd do some sums really: find a couple of printers that look good, then find out how much replacement toner cartridges cost and what their average yields are to get some idea of how much each will cost in real-world terms. Normally a new machine will come with a full set of toners, but these will be 'starter' cartridges designed to get you going, but to konk out before too long. Manufacturers normally have to sell the printers at a loss these days and they make all the money back on the consumables. Some companies are therefore fighting hard to control toner sales - as I was leaving, Lexmark were introducing region encoding into their toner cartridges!
*Not that hilarious.Edit: I meant to say that colour lasers are never designed to produce amazing quality colour images. They're designed for you to print Excel spreadsheets out on with coloured cells. Sure, they'll print photos, but the quality will likely be worse than what a more specialist inkjet can manage.