Epson EcoTank printer

Nathan plugaz at codezilla.xyz
Wed Dec 28 16:51:19 MST 2022


On Tuesday, December 27, 2022 3:09:17 PM CST Harold Hartley via PLUG-discuss 
wrote:
> Brother supports Linux on all their printers. I have a all-in-one with fax
> and works great. Epson stopped supporting Linux 3 years ago.
> 


You got anything to support this? In the past several years I have, very 
happily, dumped my HP printers and replaced them with Epson EcoTank printers 
and love them. 

So much so, that I just recently purchased their 16600 series for my wife's 
Etsy business. They are fast, and flawless, as far as I can tell.

We use all Fedora, if that makes a difference.
I will never again purchase anything but Epson.

(one caveat, I use ethernet solely for my printers. I despise wifi)






> On Tue, Dec 27, 2022, at 12:06, Rusty Carruth via PLUG-discuss wrote:
> > Report on printer compatibility with Linux as experienced today.
> > 
> > I won't bore everyone with all the details (but I will mention this
> > whole exercise took many hours of research, plus 2 trips to 3 different
> > stores, and the purchase and return of a printer that didn't do fax as I
> > wanted), but, I was in the market for a printer to replace my HP color
> > laser all-in-one.
> > 
> > 
> > Why would I replace a really nice HP Color LaserJet?  Well, it
> > apparently decided that it wouldn't print well any more with non-HP
> > carts, and buying a full set of the silly things was in the neighborhood
> > of $300 or more, IIRC.  (Oh, and the HP instant ink program, which
> > looked like a pretty good deal, is ONLY for inkjet printers!)
> > 
> > 
> > So, I figured I could spend $300 for genuine HP and HOPE it made the
> > printer happy, or punt and get a new printer.  I went the latter route.
> > 
> > 
> > After 'much'-ish research, I decided I'd go for a Brother Color Laser
> > All-In-One (we require Fax, don't ask why ;-), since Brothers are
> > reputed to be excellently-supported on Linux.
> > 
> > 
> > Found the best price anywhere (the local Staples, believe it or not!)
> > and was about to plunk down my card to get it when I realized it was
> > going to be around $750 or so for the printer ($400-ish?) and genuine
> > Brother carts ($350-ish  - sound similar to the HP prices? yeah.).
> > 
> > 
> > Woah! Ouch!  Hey, I'm retired now, that's kinda a shock.  Back up,
> > regroup, decide to try out the EcoTank idea, something I'd seriously
> > considered in the past.  Picked an Epson (ET-4800, for like $269 at -
> > believe it or not - WalMart (I'm skipping the first purchase which I had
> > to return - no fax)), brought it home.
> > 
> > 
> > Interesting setup method.  I downloaded the Epson printer setup app on
> > to my Android.  All went very well until I tried to enter my WIFI
> > password.  (First off, it doesn't look like the ET-4800 does 5GHz Wifi,
> > only 2.4, so I had to switch my phone over to the 2.4 side. This might
> > be an 'issue' with more than my 4800, so beware).  I tried it 4 or 5
> > times, never got it to work (and the app was very weird - in order to
> > re-enter your WiFI password you had to tell it you had done it, then it
> > would give you the 'enter password' dialog.  Otherwise it was in an
> > infinite loop saying it couldn't see the printer yet, did you enter the
> > password correctly, did you do it right).
> > 
> > Anyway, after the ink was 'charged', I went to the front panel and
> > connected to wifi (just fine, thank you very much, on the first try),
> > then suddenly the app saw it and all was well.
> > 
> > My son has Apple stuff and was pretty much immediately able to print.
> > 
> > I went to Epson and looked up Linux print support, downloaded the
> > appropriate (in my case) .deb file, installed it and the
> > epsonscan2-bundle, fired up my 'Printers' tool, and there it was. I
> > didn't even have to search/destroy um, I mean search/install.
> > 
> > Select it, say print test page, immediate print success.
> > 
> > 
> > On my wife's Linux machine I tried running their 'epsonscan2' program
> > and was not impressed.  It didn't find the scanner.  So, I ran over to
> > XSane and simple-scan and both could see it with no problem. I used
> > XSane to scan in both BW and color, no problems. Oh, and it knew to let
> > me choose the ADF or the flatbed!
> > 
> > At first I thought it didn't have extreme scan resolution, then I
> > fiddled in simple-scan and set it to 1200 - whoa! But very slow.
> > 
> > (In the spirit of full disclosure, I'm having a weird problem getting
> > scanning to work on my computer, but it works perfectly on my wife's...)
> > 
> > When I did all the above stuff with my HP (long ago in a galaxy far
> > away), it worked, but I seem to recall that getting the scanning to work
> > was a little more of an issue.
> > 
> > 
> > On the other hand, I have a much older Epson (from an even longer time
> > ago and an even further away galaxy!) that I did have issues with
> > finding and setting up, so it looks to me like Epson has improved a lot.
> > 
> > 
> > Haven't printed much yet, but so far so good.
> > 
> > 
> > All the above to say that Epson's Linux support worked quite well for
> > me  this time.  Linux is Linux Mint 20.2.
> > 
> > Anybody want to buy an unhappy HP Color LaserJet MFP M281cdw? ;-)
> > 
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