A
thermal CD printer uses pressure
and heat to apply text and graphics to the CD-R
printable surface. The resulting print is waterproof
and scratchproof and does not require any additional
coating. The major limitation of a thermal print
is inability to adequately produce photographic
images. A thermal print should only be used
for simple text and graphics. An inkjet
CD printer works very much like a regular
paper inkjet printer. The ink is sprayed from
nozzles onto the inkjet printable CD-R surface.
After printing, the CDs are coated with a lacquer
or laminate to ensure the CDs are highly water
and scratch proof. The print quality is superb.
In fact, the vibrancy and detail of an inkjet
print can only be matched by an offset print
(not even a screen print comes close!) Photographic
images, text, logos and other graphics are all
rendered superbly. The main drawbacks of an
inkjet print are the inability to produce Pantone
colors, some degree of difficulty to precisely
color match and time. It can take up to 4 minutes
to print one full coverage CD! We use an inkjet
print as standard for all our short run CD and
DVD runs. The quality print out and the low
price make it the best and most cost effective
option for your projects with quantities below
500 units. We would always recommend an inkjet
print instead of a thermal print for all short
run work.
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