Sii Smart Label Printer 420
Smart label printer 420 (14 items found). A smart choice for carrying out high volume label printing in multiple areas with reduced cost of ownership. Smart label printer 420 (14 items found). A smart choice for carrying out high volume label printing in multiple areas with reduced cost of ownership. Featured Products PRINTERS SLP 620 SLP 650 SLP 650SE LABELS. And it's surprisingly affordable. With the SLP 620, you can easily tackle most everyday label. Printers SII. Smart Label Printer 200 & 420 driver is a system required driver for your product.By installing this. Nch Express Invoice Registration Code Free Download on this page.

This label printer is inconsistent and frustrating at times. Loading labels isn't that difficult, but even if you are very careful with the alignment, the printer will incremently misalign them with each label you print, until the labels are all the way to one side of the printer. The only situation in which this wouldn't matter is if you're using it to print labels that span the full width of the printer. For my business we use labels about half that size for addresses, so I encounter this frustration frequently. However, it was never so terrible that I couldn't put up with it.
However, within the past couple of months the printer has started to turn itself off in the middle of printing. I haven't changed any settings, done any upgrades, or changed the type of labels I'm using. Yet the problem has gotten worse and now it just stops printing about halfway through a label almost 90% of the time. I can't even tell you how many labels I have wasted trying to resolve this issue, but I don't think I am going to bother trying anymore. I'm considering it a lost cause and will ask my company to purchase a new one.
I guess I should be happy that it lasted as long as it did (I've been using this one since 2012, and I believe someone else used it for a few years before me, though not as frequently as I do), but even when it was at it's peak it still wasn't that great. This label printer is inconsistent and frustrating at times. Loading labels isn't that difficult, but even if you are very careful with the alignment, the printer will incremently misalign them with each label you print, until the labels are all the way to one side of the printer. The only situation in which this wouldn't matter is if you're using it to print labels that span the full width of the printer. For my business we use labels about half that size for addresses, so I encounter this frustration frequently. However, it was never so terrible that I couldn't put up with it.
However, within the past couple of months the printer has started to turn itself off in the middle of printing. I haven't changed any settings, done any upgrades, or changed the type of labels I'm using. Yet the problem has gotten worse and now it just stops printing about halfway through a label almost 90% of the time. I can't even tell you how many labels I have wasted trying to resolve this issue, but I don't think I am going to bother trying anymore. I'm considering it a lost cause and will ask my company to purchase a new one. I guess I should be happy that it lasted as long as it did (I've been using this one since 2012, and I believe someone else used it for a few years before me, though not as frequently as I do), but even when it was at it's peak it still wasn't that great.
My workplace uses Seiko 420 and 450 label printers to print address labels and Code 39 barcodes. As with other reviewers, we have found that these printers have difficulty keeping output alignment straight when using labels less than the maximum height supported by the printer (i.e., the 1.13 x 3.5 inch small address labels), even when the label guides are fitted to the label roll. When the printer is upright, output tends to either slant towards one side of the label and can print outside the physical margins of the label. Our solution to this problem is to turn the printer on its side. This usually helps to keep output alignment straight. The SLP 450 seems to keep a tighter grip on the labels than the 420; so the 450 is a little tougher to fix when labels mis-feed.