I had one concern after the information on the Ricoh AP 2610. Somone had told me that sometimes these inexpensive laser printers use a counter in the toner cartridge, so that when it is advertised that the cartridge is good for some number of copies, when that number of copies has been printed, that's all, folks. The price point of the toner cartridge for the Ricoh caused me to be concerned that this might be true with this unit, and I sent an email to the local sales rep asking about it; I was informed that there are volume sensors in the cartridge, rather than a counter, so that if one was printing documents with less density than the standard, one could presumably get more copies than the 20k advertised. He answered my followup question before I got a chance to ask; the density upon which 20k copies is based is 5 percent toner coverage. If, as I suspect, typical music has a lesser density than the standard text page, thus, the number of copies per toner cartridge is significantly increased: if toner coverage of a sheet of music is 2.5 percent, for example, the cartridge should last for about 40k copies.
ns
_______________________________________________ Finale mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale
