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Surething cd labeler 6
Surething cd labeler 6




surething cd labeler 6

I killed a printer ignoring the change cartridge warning and forgot to change it until the ink cartridge ran totally dry. You NEED to keep a close watch on when it says ink needs changing, you MUST change the cartridges otherwise it WILL kill your printhead when the ink runs out and gets air in or very hard to dissolve dried ink.

Surething cd labeler 6 full#

I then moved onto a Canon Pixma 7200/7250 CD printers and still use the same model I used over 5 years ago, with very very cheap generic ink cartridges of 5 full sets of 5 cartridges per set for about £10-£15 with postage. Then Epson started making it very difficult for generic cartridges with chip detection in the printers so then couldn't be reset without chip reset devices which Epson then started making impossible to reset chips I used Epson label printers for years and refillable cartridges that I filled myself when ink was very expensive and cartridges cost even more. Too heavy, too sticky, out of balance and various others I tried sticky CD labels years and years ago when CD printing first came out, I stopped using it very quickly when it caused numerous issues with disc reads with the common causes of labels. Not as simple to use for simple prints, but offers a lot more for better quality prints and labels I use Acoustica CD/DVD Printer for some years, but then started having issues with it and moved onto SureThing Gold. That means if the top surface of the disc gets peeled/warped/scratched/flaked, it has a high likelihood of damaging the data immediately underneath.ĭo what you want, but you've been warned. While DVDs and Blurays store their data on a layer that is in the middle of the disc's vertical sandwich (for DVD), or closer to the bottom but still with some protection layer in between (for Blurays), CDs store their data almost directly under the top layer. More importantly, if there is ever the possibility of someone trying to peel them off, YOU SHOULD NOT PUT THEM ON CDS (whether CDRs, CDRWs or even CDROMs)! Not only do those labels not retain their stick after a while, but it can make a disc have "out of balance" issues in a player, especially if not put on properly-centered. Printing LABELS ON DISC, otoh, is a bad idea. Printing covers and inserts is always fine. And because of that, I need to refresh peoples' understanding. Wow I didn't think this kind of thing would come up again, but it has. I found this out the hard way as most people have over the years.

surething cd labeler 6

sticky back labels are not recommended, they just don't aren't worth the effort. I've printed DVD/BD case inserts many times in the past. Neato paper, then decide to print it instead on Memorex paper, a printable disc, etc. at any time - no need to lock in an output target when you create your project you can design your CD label for, say, Real-time preview of all Light Scribe disc colors no need to launch a print-preview dialog to see how your Light Scribe disc will look when you print itĬhange your target paper type, disc template, etc. Optionally fade the edges when printing on printable discs so that if your printer lacks perfect alignment, white edges around the disc look more naturalĪutomatic extra bleeding on paper labels and inserts to help compensate for wonky printer alignments Optionally print borders or fold lines for inserts Support for designing and printing all the miscellaneous spines & labels that get added to the corners of disc label papers Printer alignment wizard allows automatic compensation for out-of-alignment printers alignment can also be adjusted for individual paper types Hundreds of brands and models of paper labels and insert papers supported Print multiple LightScribe discs simultaneously - limited only by the number of LightScribe drives you've got attached to your computerĭesign and print jewel cases, DVD cases, and blu-ray cases Use Light Scribe to etch labels directly onto your CD or DVD surface using your drive's laser (requires LightScribe drive and disc) Print directly on CD surfaces using more than 100 supported printer models from Epson, HP, Canon, and more I'll keep shopping around, and I welcome more replies! Acoustica: Unless I'm missing something, it doesn't seem that Acaustica or SureThing offer DVD and BD cover printing.






Surething cd labeler 6