Originally Posted by
John Morton
I am going to have to disagree with you there, Manfred. I was lucky enough to get my hands on an older model Minolta/QMS Magicolor 330 EX color laser that was a factory refurbished model, for $1,000 (they normally sold for a lot more - a LOT more) that makes spectacular prints. I had to hover over their online store for about 8 months until one showed up, and then jump on it, but it was worth it!
That printer was designed for prepress work, prints with an Adobe RGB gamut, and has very intense colors and very detailed print (you will never find an inkjet droplet as small as a particle of laser toner). The prints are permanent (solid pigment melted into the paper) and water proof.
I've also worked with a very large Xerox 700i Digital Color Press that outputs beautiful images; but those are insanely expensive and large, appropriate for businesses only.
From what I read at the time when I picked up my color laser printer, the big advantage these much more expensive units have (or at least had at the time) over inkjets was in the included software, notably the Rasterized Image Processor (RIP). Apparently, part of the reasonable cost of inkjets can be attributed to their lack of really good RIP software (but this may have changed).
Anyway, it turns out that color laser printers are set to print business graphics by default, but also (for the most part, as far as I know) have the ability to output decent photo quality prints if one resets the print parameters appropriately. Apparently, it is not uncommon for people who produce their own greeting and post cards to use color laser printers to do this, and to get very good results doing so.
The biggest consideration is the thickness of the media the printer can handle, since it has to heat the paper to the point where the toner will fuse into it; and that for larger prints, you need a straight/flat print input option.