Both the S21 and the older D88 seem to be entry-level four-ink CMYK Durabrite systems. I doubt they'd bother reformulating the inks, and that's why the same profile may work on both printers. I wouldn't put it past Epson to just bung the same unit in a new chassis and change the chips so they can charge more for smaller ink cartridges.
Cynical? Me? Surely not!
For me, though, building my business on the cheapest unit Epson can kick out of their door is not the way I'd want to go. But, if it works, lucky ol' you!
Ian M wrote:I just wish the companies who produce printers would produce something just for us doing sublimation as a business.
I agree with you on that. Ideally, the company that makes money on the inks should produce a bespoke printer so that we wouldn't be restricted to the revolving door policy of a third party printer manufacturer. Now, who is the company that makes money on the inks? I'm always forgetting...
Some people might point out that the original patent granted to the desktop sublimation systems that we're all held to was for producing a sublimation ink that could be used in a printer with a thermal printhead. That would have been interesting had it been explored. Some people might mention that, but not me of course. I'm not like that.
Ian M wrote:I use a Brother printer for my everyday printing & wish they would make something I could use at home for sublimation. The Brother has to be the best printer I have ever used & the quality of the prints are excellent each & every time.
I've recently replaced my Brother AIO. When I got the previous one, I asked the question (on another forum) of why Sawgrass didn't support them as well as Epson. Brother printers also use non-thermal piezo printheads - and, in the case of these AIO, they have a significant advantage over the Epson printers in that the ink cartridges remain stationary (they don't sit on top of the printhead). This advantage would eliminate all the cable-feeding that we have to do with CISS for our Epson printers.
Still, no one ever went into the dye-sublimation business hoping to find any sign of common sense.
