

I have a Hewlett Packard Laserjet 2300d (the d stands for duplex) which prints the card-sheets with no problem. GTPoompt (talk) 12:13, 31 July 2007 (UTC) I have had very successful results using "Pro Edge" business cards which are cut rather than perforated and have thin adhesive strips which hold the cards together in an A4 sheet for printing. Anyway, they sell ID card printers that are Thermal Transfer I believe. Shinhan 12:08, 31 July 2007 (UTC) Might want to try printers from Fargo Electronics (I am suprised there is an entry for them). It seems there is no low budget variant for card printers if you ignore pre-perforated paper. I couldnt find any price quote from Canon website, Google Product or eBay. Ĭanon says CX320 is the cheapest version whose price, and according to this source its price is 3100$. It appears that Canon might have a solution, however. Consumer printers are unable to handle paper that small. I want to load blank business-sized cards into the printer and it print on both sides.- Sonjaaa 02:12, 31 July 2007 (UTC) That will likely require a custom printer. I find the quality poor, and there is too much work in detaching the cards.

For instance, you won't be able to get raised print on a laser- or inkjet- printed business card. However, these will not have the quality and features of a professionally-printer business card. You can purchase pre-printed or just pre-perforated paper just for this task. Is there such a thing as a printer for my home that I can load with blank business cards, and it will print them out in duplex (double-sided)? If so, what brands or models are currently the most popular or highest-rated in the "low budget" category (maybe black and white ink jet, etc.)?- Sonjaaa 00:31, 31 July 2007 (UTC) Almost any printer will suffice. July 31 a home printer for business cards? 1.8 to convert a pdf file to word/excel file.1.6 Overwriting of geographic coordinates.1.5 Problem with WMM / downloading YouTube videos.1.4 Cantralized Wikipedia geographic database?.
