



🎉 Elevate Your Artistry with Every Print!
The Epson Stylus Pro 3880 is a high-performance color inkjet printer designed for professionals, featuring cutting-edge pigment ink technology, a maximum print resolution of 2880 x 1440 dpi, and a robust design that accommodates various media sizes up to 17 x 22 inches. With its advanced image quality architecture and optimal black density, this printer delivers exceptional results for artists and designers alike.
| Maximum Print Resolution Black and White | 2880 x 1440 dpi |
| Wattage | 25 watts |
| Is Electric | No |
| Duplex | No |
| Dual-sided printing | No |
| Color | Black |
| Paper Size | 17 x 22 inches |
| Maximum Sheet Capacity | 150 |
| Media Size Maximum | 11 x 17 inch |
| B&W Pages per Minute | 0.5 ppm |
| Color Pages per Minute | 0.5 ppm |
| Hardware Connectivity | USB |
| Connectivity Technology | USB |
| Ink Color | Magenta, plus other colors |
| Resolution | 2880 x 1440 |
| Number of Trays | 1 |
| Control Method | Remote, Touch |
| Controller Type | Touchscreen or USB Interface |
| Print media | Paper (plain) |
| Scanner Type | Sheetfed |
| Maximum Copy Speed Black and White | 0.4 ppm |
| Compatible Devices | PC, Laptops |
| Printer Type | Inkjet |
| Additional Features | network-ready |
| Printer Output Type | Color |
T**Y
Epson 3880 pin wheel holes in your prints !!! Nightmare !!!
Look it up on the internet before you buy this printer. When feeding paper from the rear you will get small holes the entire length of your photo. If the photo has a lot of heavy dark regions it shows up even more... A shame because the printing quality is spectacular, but the tiny little holes destroy the value of your print... Take a flashlight and hold it from the side of your print and the holes will show up...Epson is very well aware of this and have done nothing... You can print from the front but this cuts down the size of your prints... Epson should be forced to refund everyone's money...
H**.
Wow - And it will pay for itself
The main reason I used to justify the cost (to myself and my wife) for buying the 3880 was the ink cost. The ink cartriges are 8 times the size for 3 times the cost of the R1900 ink. I really like my Epson R1900 printer and still have it, but it is now religated to back-up and DVD/CD printing. But the cost and low amount of ink in each cartridge was killing me.The 3880 was a lot bigger and heavier than I expected. I kidded myself reading the specs that it was only a little bigger than the R1900. It's not, it's a lot bigger.Set up was easy. I love that it is a true network printer, so that the information is bi-direction even from a wireless computer.The prints are spectacular. I used Eye-One to calibrate my monitor (on my Mac Pro with 2 24" cinema displays) and the prints are as close to my monitor as I have ever had before. The advanced B&W mode is also spectacular. Finally perfect B&W prints.As of now, I've had the printer about a month. I've printed 40 17x22 full color (non-white background) posters. 70 8x10 B&W. 20 8x10 color and about another 20 smaller prints and just replaced the Vivid Magenta and Yellow. Most of the rest of the ink cartriges still have plenty of ink left. YAY!After I ordered the printer Amazon started (daily, for a few days) offering me extra ink for the 3880 in my "gold box". As it turns out, Epson has two different K3 inks for Vivid Magenta and Light Magenta for the 3880 vs 3800 (all the other K3 inks are the same for both printers). Amazon offered me the wrong ones and since I didn't know that yet, I ordered them. They gave me a refund. T580A00 and T580B00 are the correct Magenta ones for the 3880. Even the Epson manual for the 3880 has it wrong in one of two places. I guess they just copied the 3800 manual and missed a few things. Amazon said they fixed it in their catalog, I haven't heard back from Epson yet. So be careful ordering extra ink.A few things have gone wrong. I've had a few paper misfeeds, more than one sheet fed at a time. Thsi happened on my R1900 some times too mainly with Ultra Premium Matte. So watch for that. I've also had a driver problem. When I started printing the 17x22 posters, 10 at a time, 3 different posters. It seems that the driver got confused and half way through printing the first 10, it started using the settings from the second 10. I canceled all the jobs and did one poster at a time (e.g. 10 at a time) and everything was fine.Another small problem. I have lots of 13x19 paper left over from the R1900. The 13x19 is not a native size for the 3880, so I had to make a "custom size". I tried several things, but still haven't been able to print a 13x19 borderless.I'm also having problems with some of the function of the remote monitor program. Some of those functions don't find the printer on the network.But these problems are minor and I'm sure will be fixed in software someday. Don't let that stop you from getting this wonderful printer.Oh yeah, don't panic when you install the maintenance cartridge at initial setup, as it immediately goes to 73% available. That is normal.This is one of the best printers I have ever owned. Everyone who has seen the prints from them is convinced that they are professionally done. And I guess that is true, since this is from Epsons professional line.
U**D
They've almost got perfect
I almost felt bad not rating this printer at 5 stars, but it does have a couple small problems that make it less than perfect. First off, it is a remarkable machine that produces superb prints of artwork. All final digital product is, of course, dependent on the filtering and scanning that the intake and digital manipulation software provide, but the quality of printing for line drawings, ink washes, and similar works really impressed me. I have not done a lot with photograph reproduction, but what I have done was also impressive.It is not, however, a perfect machine. The settings process which has to be done per print, or saved as a custom batch setting is cumbersome. The layout is a bit awkward and makes it difficult to remember to go through every setting and tweak it for your particular batch printing job. You can establish your own profiles, but not every setting is included in the profile which means you might still have to tweak the settings for even the minute differences in a batch. As per tech support, the layout options per print are dependent on the software you are using to order the print job. The manual paper feed at the rear of the machine is EXTREMELY sensitive to paper being cocked a little to one side or the other (so sensitive that I truly believe it is imagining things). I am actually completely unable to determine what the problem is in each instance, and simply wiggle the paper a tad in its position, and try again. The output print is pushed hard against the right side of the machine, which is ridiculous considering the amount of space there is to work with. It tends to catch on the sundry little irregularities and joints in the plastic located there when using thin/flimsy paper. Thicker paper seems to glide over it without issue.All in all, I can highly recommend it for quality of output and economy of use (relative use of "economy" here - these are very high quality prints and not dirt cheap), but it is not a 'set it and forget it' producer of batch prints. You do need to stay on it from start to finish. The last and final aggravation is that if you miss setting a paper-type change that requires matte black ink when you've been using photo black ink or vice versa, it undergoes a purge of the system, spilling all the 'other' type of ink into a waste tray. This is better than having to change out ink cartridges, but once it begins there is no way to stop it without shutting down the machine mid process which I'm sure is not recommended. However, if you don't, it will finish purging the one type of ink and then reloading with the other, and will do the whole thing in reverse when you correct your settings. A phenomenal waste of ink. There desperately needs to be an "abort" button to halt all processes in mid stride considering how easily you can miss a setting.
J**A
So far, not so good!
I like to think that ultimately I will be ecstatic with my new Stylus Pro 3880 but so far? not so much! Let me explain. Out of the box, untaped, tested it, worked fine. Printed 3 or 4 photos I needed for my photography assignment and they were head and shoulders above the output from my previous printer (an HP8250 which I loved), particularly in color and tone. A week later, I'm excited to print out a few photos to give out for Valentine's day and I get something called a 150C error (call your service station). After 3 phone calls, including one to a very rude "Supervisor" I have to box up the unit, ship it back to them and they will replace it. I asked several question about the error including what has Epson done to correct the problem, essentially so I could determine whether I want to keep it or not, and no one could answer that. They also couldn't tell me whether the occurrence of the problem, which has apparently occurred since the release of this model, has decreased, Much remains to be seen. Perhaps I'll provide an update, hopefully Epson will provide a five-star resolution.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 days ago