Showing posts with label InfoPrint 75. Show all posts
Showing posts with label InfoPrint 75. Show all posts

Saturday, May 8, 2021

Time & Material Repair: Ricoh and Canon Océ End-of-Service Continuous Forms Laser Printers

Why play Roulette with the Company’s Printer Operations?

Ricoh and Canon Oce have announced the End of Service on some 75 to 100 ppm pin feed mono lasers. Once the announced “end of service” date is passed, the vendor has no obligation to you!

Consider the Stark Differences from the old expired Ricoh or Oce Service Plan. 

REPAIR PARTS - no obligation to ...

...have an inventory of replacement parts or have any source of used parts. Ricoh and Oce have been planning to shut down the service coverage for at least five years. They likely made plans to scrap the defunct and fully depreciated inventory. Their service techs may search for used market parts, but maybe not very hard, as it is now not a top priority. The search time involved is likely billable as well. According to Ricoh service personnel, they will not even come out for repair until they find the likely needed part.  

...charge a set price for parts. Ricoh and Oce can charge whatever they choose. There was a reason that the service contract was thousands of dollars annually. Some components could be the total cost of the old annual service bill – before labor charges. Some installed customers may choose to gather a spare printer or two just to have service spare parts ready and sitting on site. 

...continue selling supplies like toners. Customers may buy a stockpile of toner, but without a critical repair part such as a drum, developer unit, or fuser unit, however much toner is in the stock room will not allow the printer to run correctly.

SERVICE TECHNICIANS - no obligation to…

...answer a call in a timely response time. T&M customers are the second priority. Any previous “SLA” or service level agreement on those printers is now a thing of the past. Service techs go first to service contract customers. They can leave your site to go take a higher priority service call.

...concern themselves that your printing is “mission-critical.” Your print jobs may wait on the repairs for days or maybe weeks. Printing your current labels or reports should not be a crucial part of your operation if you plan to rely on Ricoh and Oce T&M repair. They cared so much in the past because you paid for a top priority service contract.

...complete the service call repair. A call from a customer with a service contract takes top priority, and the Ricoh and Oce service tech can leave before the repair is completed. Emergency dispatch repair calls take top priority over time and materials work.

...fix the printer. Any Ricoh or Oce service call will be on a “best efforts basis.” They are not under contract to get it fixed.

...continue to offer T&M for any length of time. They may initially agree to help you for a while but may withdraw the offer at any time. Management can reassign coverage and willingness to do time and materials work.

...keep within a price for labor or parts. If they search for parts, expect that the search time not on your site can be billed as well.

...provide any “second-level” technical support for drivers and controller code issues. Here is a quote from Ricoh: “Once maintenance service and support are withdrawn, Ricoh no longer provides any support, such as assistance for installation, usage (how-to) or code defect-related questions for that version and release level.”  

DESIRE TO HELP: - no obligation to…

...care if you are in a bind or not. If Ricoh still sells a printer in the range of the withdrawn unit, they hoped to sell you the new one. If they do not sell a replacement printer, their motivation to worry for you had ended when you did not buy an alternative replacement. They may offer help only as a short-term accommodation to you.

Now, what is YOUR own Obligation for your Company? 

Those printers from Ricoh and Oce were suitable, and the vendor did offer good, complete, supportive service. Now that offering is no longer the same wise decision the company once selected. It is now much different, with more risk and uncertainty for a reliable future.

There is a saying in the Distribution Industry. “If trucks don’t roll, then HEADS DO.” Where does your business turn for support on those old Ricoh and Oce printers, now that your printer vendor has turned away from their install base? 

What is the answer to Top Management when the printer goes down for good, no repair is possible, and they ask, “Could you not find an alternative to keep our business running?”

The intelligent action is to plan, test, evaluate - then act. Do you have EOS printers? Mission-Critical tractor-feed labels or printout needs, running on InfoPrint 75 or Oce Variostream 7120 units, and have no printer alternative tested and ready to adopt? It’s like playing Roulette in Vegas, betting RED or BLACK, or 1/3 the board. You may hope you will be fine, but what if the little ball falls into GREEN 0 or 00? When the market has excellent replacement printers available, is the avoidance of budget approval and the associated risk really worth it? With Ricoh and Oce printers at end-of-service, why risk the company’s operations on “we will probably be ok?”

We can help. For more information, contact Warren Neeley with Printer Connection at  wneeley@pciprinters.com or 866-430-6202.

Monday, August 17, 2020

To InfoPrint 75 and InfoPrint 100 Users, A Swan Song

The Curtain Call for Some Great InfoPrint Printers

To parody a classic by Paul Anka:  

And now, the end is near, And so we face its final curtain. 

My friends, I'll say it clear, I'll state the case of which I'm certain.

It’s been an InfoPrint that printed each and every nice way

But now, the end of March, it hits the highway!

Ol' Blue Eyes took Paul Anka's words to a long career. Unfortunately for the InfoPrint 75 and InfoPrint 100, their careers are coming to a close.

Just last week, a current user of InfoPrint 75 printers told me they got a 'last call' letter from the supplier of the toner. It advised them to make their last buy of toner soon. After April 1, 2021, they could no longer provide toner. Note: that supplier is the ONLY provider of the OEM toner for the InfoPrint 75 and 100!

As shared before, Ricoh also drops service on March 31, 2021. For those customers that thought about buying extra units for spare parts and trying to go on without Ricoh, the OEM supplies apparently will end as well. We never found any good third-party toner manufacturers to show interest in the IP75/100 market due to the limited volumes. These good printers will run out of supplies and repairs this next April.

We have some great alternatives for these InfoPrint users, and we are ready to help you test, evaluate, and install your printers. Call Printer Connection at 866-430-6202 or contact Warren Neeley at WNeeley@PCIprinters.com to get started!

Wednesday, November 6, 2019

InfoPrint 75 and InfoPrint 100 User? "Turn out the lights, the party's over!"

We tried to warn you back in 2016 with our blog on the InfoPrint 75 and InfoPrint 100. when we wrote, "Don't be captive in the Ricoh cage with the InfoPrint 75 or InfoPrint 100."

Ricoh was bound to pull the plug on these great printers, and now it has happened. Service customers have received notice from Ricoh service that come April 1, 2021, there's no more service. We expect that their sole-source Ricoh toner availability will come to a screeching halt at the same time.


As Willie Nelson famously wrote and sang, "Turn out the lights, the party's over. They say that all good things must end. Call it a night! The party's over. And tomorrow starts the same old thing again." Except for InfoPrint users, as there is now a limit to those tomorrows.  March 31, 2021, to be exact.

In another great Willie song, he wrote "It's been so long now, but it seems now, that it was only yesterday! Gee, ain't it funny, how time slips away." The TIME IS NOW to include your replacement choice into the budget planning for this change that's now upon us.

What can users do if they still need reliable continuous forms laser printing (with or without IPDS print language) and onsite service? Contact Warren Neeley at Printer Connection at 817-430-6202 for some great options in CF Lasers.

Friday, April 26, 2013

InfoPrint 75 - Enjoy It Now At A Reduced Price

InfoPrint 75 Laser Printer Availability


The InfoPrint 75 is a nice continuous forms laser printer unit that unfortunately did a disappearing act in the market.

2020 EDIT: RICOH DROPS IP75 SERVICE ON MARCH 31, 2021. NO NEW REPAIR PARTS AVAILABILITY. TONER SOLE SOURCE HAS ANNOUNCED END-OF-AVAILABILITY OF IP75/100 TONER PRODUCT 03/31/2021. THESE GREAT PRINTERS WILL BECOME UNUSABLE FOR KEY MISSIONS. NO RICOH ALTERNATIVES. RICOH WALKS AWAY FROM IP75 AND IP100 INSTALL BASE. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT PRINTER CONNECTION, (866) 430-6202.


Once sold by the InfoPrint Business Partners and the nationwide team of InfoPrint sales reps, the machine went into hiding after the end of 2011.  Ricoh shut down the InfoPrint operations, canceling all the resellers and laying off all the reps, save for the very few RPPS reps that continued to sell the $500k+ roll-fed mono and $2MM color units of the InfoPrint 4100 and 5000 product families. 

Customers still have needs, and resellers could still sell these machines except the InfoPrint 75 is not available to them.  Ricoh could certainly take an order and take the reseller's customer and run, but there's nothing in it for the folks that know the customers best.

It is now effectively an orphaned unit.  The former Ikon sales reps could sell it, but they are not typically in the enterprise industrial marketplace enough to invest the time to know the product and its usage.  The RPPS reps could sell it, but why spend time on a $75,000 unit (before discounts) when your quota is high and you are tasked to sell $500k or $2MM units?

Printer Connection has access to a few of these Infoprint 75 units, lightly used and ready for new homes. The same reliable Ricoh RPPS (former InfoPrint) maintenance service and technicians are still available to maintain the printers, with RPPS service contracts also available from Printer Connection.

For a spec sheet, click here.

Contact Warren Neeley at 817-939-5614 or WNeeley@PCIprinters.com.