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German Sacristan
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B2 vs. B3 Inkjet: The Battle Begins

Fujifilm B2 upgrade, Ricoh adds to its production offerings

May 12, 2021 12:22:28 PM

 

Fujifilm launched a B2-size printer 10 years ago, followed by HP in 2013, and years later by Konica Minolta and Komori. Even though expectations have always been high for this digital printing larger format, reality has fallen short. The opportunity was always there to shift more shorter offset runs and variable data print jobs to B2 digital, along with going after the big size MIF of the largest A3/B3 production electrophotography printers that have been in the market since the early 2000s.

 

The biggest challenge to convert PSPs with large print volumes being produced on A3/B3 electrophotography large production printers to B2 was the high capital investments of the B2 printers.  Another challenge was to shift more offset print volumes to B2 digital, as even though B2 has lower running costs than the A3/B3 electrophotography devices, there is still a big gap versus offset.

 

What is shifting things is the new introduction of B3 inkjet presses with commercial print quality by Canon (iX series) and Xerox (Baltoro-Color Accelerator Module). These printers provide high productivity and duty cycles at a lower capital investment cost than B2, therefore offering lower TCOs in most cases. The B3 inkjet pressure on B2 should make B2 manufacturers reduce their capital investment costs to better compete with B3.

 

At virtual.drupa Fujifilm announced its new JetPress 750 HS, which brings greater productivity from its successor (5,400 B2 sheets per hour vs. 3,600) in all media weights. The compromise there is that the resolution drops to 1200 x 600 dpi. The new printer may also not need primer while printing at 1200 x 600 dpi, reducing the running cost considerably. New inks might reduce the cost of consumables, too. Finally, Fujifilm protects customer investments by making the 750 HS field upgradable.

 

Ricoh also announced its new B2 Pro Z75 inkjet printer to compete in the expanding B2 and B3 markets. The device runs with aqueous inks at 4,500 B2 sheets per hour and can print on a variety of substrates, including offset coated papers up to 400 gsm. The B2+-size is 23"x29"at up to 1200 x 1200 dpi. The new drying system is expected to deliver good print quality, even on thin paper.

The RICOH Pro Z75 will compete against a number of devices in the B2 and B3 spaces, which are expected to grow even further.

 

The large production cut-sheet inkjet market is expected to be busy and even more competitive with roll-fed inkjet printers, what with more flexibility (variety of input drawers) and lower capital investment costs. Large production cut-sheet B2 and B3 inkjet devices are expected to capture a great part of the print volume consolidation happening in the market due to lower TCOs and commercial print quality.

 

Exciting and interesting to watch this healthy cut-sheet B2 and B3 inkjet battle as these printers try to shift more offset print volumes to digital, while gaining as much electrophotography business as they can.

 

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