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DYMO LabelWriter 4XL, 4" x 6" Label Printer

DYMO LabelWriter 4XL, 4 x 6 Label PrinterBrand: DYMO
Department: Labels, Label Makers, Tags & Stamps

List Price: $279.00
Buy New: $249.00
as of 9/9/2010 16:55 GMT details
You Save: $30.00 (11%)



New (20) from $249.00

Seller: Amazon.com
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews

Color: Black/Gray
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Number Of Items: 1
Modem: None
Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.8
Dimensions (in): 10.3 x 10 x 9.5

MPN: 1755120
Model: 1755120
UPC: 717010570682
EAN: 0717010570682

Shipping: Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Features:
  • Prints a 4" x 6" labels, plus dozens of existing DYMO LabelWriter label styles and sizes for a variety of office and commercial uses
  • Prints up to 53 labels per minute* or 3.2"/second (*4 line address label)
  • Prints in high resolution - 300 dpi, ideal for text, graphics and barcodes.
  • Thermal printing needs no ink or toner.

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Customer Reviews:
2 out of 5 stars worst printer ever!   March 25, 2010
angie
1 out of 4 found this review helpful

Omg... this printer is really hard to deal with.
When paper jams, which happened quite often, it is so hard to take out those jammed paper out!
Also, printer constantely spools paper without asking me and goes back in! WHile the paper goes back in, it peels off the sticker part out of the paper, which peeled off sticker portion jams in the middle!
THis is really frustrating.
I would never purchase this printer! And i do not recommend it to anyone!



1 out of 5 stars The labels FADE in about 6 months!!!! WASTE OF TIME AND MONEY!   April 21, 2010
Anton Karidian (Toronto)
0 out of 4 found this review helpful

This product is utter garbage. All you hard work in neatly labelling will have gone to waste! KEEP AWAY FROM THIS GARBAGE!
My discs that were kept in CD wallets AND jewel cases have faded!!!!
Waste if your valuable TIME and money.



5 out of 5 stars Great Printer for Ebay/Paypal Shipping And More   May 6, 2010
K. Crudup (Fort Lauderdale, FL)
7 out of 7 found this review helpful

I bought this printer hoping to use it on Ebay Paypal to print shipping labels. Well it works perfectly as a label printer on Paypal/Ebay. It has saved me a ton of time and worth the money I spent since I ship frequently.

For example in paypal if I have to ship ten orders using the multi shipping tool I print all ten labels at once. You have the option of printing a packing sheet to a regular printer that tells you what is to be packed in each order for the labels just printed. You need to know the weight for each shipment before printing the labels though.

Its appears that the Dymo printer is compatible with Zebra printers. Use the multi shipping tool in Paypal and set your printer to a Zebra 4X6 printer. If you are not using multi shipment in Paypal be sure to set your printer type to thermal and pick one of the Zebra 4X6 printers.

Other reviewers said the printer jams frequently. I have no such problem. What I think may have happened to that reviewer was they did not discard the first labels. Before you install a new roll for the first time you have to remove a small piece of tape from the roll. Unfortunately that tape leaves a sticky residue on one of the exposed labels. If you use that label it will put that same sticky residue in the printer causing labels to stick and jam. Dont take the chance and just get rid of the first 2 or three labels on the roll.

One reviewer said the labels fade with time. Well its a "thermal" printer and almost every device that prints on thermal paper the "ink" fades. Its actually heat the "colors" the paper and that type of paper fades over time. That is a fact of thermal technology not a problem with the printer.

Extra credit: Take those labels you discard from the new roll and put them in direct sunlight for a few days.



1 out of 5 stars Great Idea if it worked   May 21, 2010
Chop Shop (new york, ny United States)
2 out of 5 found this review helpful

This is a great idea. Sadly... I have had nothing but heartache with it.

1. For the first 3 months after purchase I couldn't get a single international label to print. which made me print US with this and all international with another printer across the room. Sort of killing the idea of efficiency. Then after Endicia and Dymo merged, suddenly it started printing international labels.

2. Right after everything seemed okay... I got 3 weeks of great performance. Now it loads the paper and with each print, it advances 2.5 labels for no reason. So I have to adjust each printing by hand and waste 2 labels per print.

Where do I drop this thing off to get my money back and all the time I lost?

DO NOT BUY.



5 out of 5 stars An Underrated Product   August 22, 2010
Leonie
Well, I had this for a few weeks, so I can't speak for some of the complaints, but I do use this in combination with Endicia to ship packages off and it works very well. Before this, I had multiple Zebra 2844.

For those who ship a lot, the Zebra 2844 (EPL) is the standard with most 4x6 labels made for it. It retails for $100-200 more than this machine, but is available ubiquitously used on ebay in the sub-$100 range. Once you get them up and running, they often print without fail.

However, the 2844's are a complete pain in the behind to set-up. We're talking playing with settings and inconsistent software from the manufacturer itself. Sometimes I d/l 3-4 software packages before the 2844 even responded at all, let alone correctly. All this wouldn't be so bad except on my Windows Desktop, if I so much as unplugged the usb cord to the computer for whatever reason (say I was moving it), and replugged it 5 minutes later in the very same USB slot, the computer wouldn't remember the printer at all, and the nightmarish set-up process would begin anew. Not acceptable. Maybe this was because the 2844 accepted parallel and serial port input as well, and USB was an afterthought in the design? Whatever the reason, it's very plug-and-play unfriendly. Also, when the computer went to sleep, the unit needed to be restarted or it would fail to respond. The third defect was that everytime I printed out a shipping label, between 1 and 7 blank labels followed. This wasn't always the case, but it was when I had to reinstall the driver and I could never figure it out. I experienced these defects on both a 2004 and 2007 manufactured 2844, so I would say these aren't random issues.

A while back, I got a notebook that replaced my desktop, I would move around, so plugging and unplugging the USB cords became a fact of life, so enter the 4XL. I always liked dymo's smaller models, they just worked, and this one was no different. You first install the very friendly software (whether d/led or from CD) and then any of their printers and the computer recognizes it without hesitation. I can plug my older Labelwriter 400 or my new 4XL or both and there will be no problems, whether the dymo label software is actively running or not (I use endicia instead). It prints without problem. I never had it jam. Can't say much more about it.

As to any jamming, I would recommend when installing any new rolls of labels that are sealed at the end with adhesive tape, thow away the labels the tape was on so any adhesive residue never enters the mechanism. That may be a source of the problem people are experiencing.

As for fading, this is a thermal printer and inherent to all thermal printers. Think of receipts as well that fade, as many are of the same technology. However, a nice dark print comes out of this that will last longer than those cheap receipts, so I have no fear shipping items, however long, long term labels for household items may require a second thought. They are affected by direct sunlight the most. Look up thermal printers in wikipedia for more info.

If I had a complaint, it's the cost of the rolls. Dymo is ridiculously expensive, wanting nearly $0.16 a label. Although 4x6 labels are an industry standard with many makers, the dymo labels are slightly different with a oblong hole between each label, perhaps telling the printer where to stop. I'm not sure. I still have the zebra labels, but I haven't had a chance to see if they worked in this machine. Dymo warns you not to use any 3rd party labels, but that's because of profit motive.

However, I see 3rd party compatible labels for this machine at a well known site called labelvalue. An excellent site, I got my zebra labels there for $0.051 (5.1 cents) a label. The dymo compatible labels are much cheaper than the "real thing" at $0.086 (8.6 cents) a label. For a small time operation, not a big difference. Figuring that I was throwing away 1-7 labels on the zebra per print, I still come out ahead.

I just have a small business and ship a dozen items a day. The dymo serves me well. If you ship day and night, and have a desktop dedicated to shipping (where the cords will absolutely never be touched), a zebra may be better, sturdier and cheaper in the long haul.


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