Epson LabelWorks LW-300 Label Printer Review

A good label maker is one of those things that you do not realize how useful it can be until you have one. Pretty much every container, drawer, and file in my shop at work is labelled and it has made my life so much easier in so many ways (like trying to tell someone over the phone where a specific gizmo is.)
I had been using a pretty generic label maker, and was excited to try the more creative Epson LabelWorks LW-300 and play with all of its features!
The LW-400 can also print specialty projects like bar codes and cable wraps and on tapes that include fluorescent colors that do not come in the 1/2″ size used by the LW-300.
I was sent the LW-300 unit to try, and it is a lot of fun to use! It reminds me of when Print Shop originally came out and suddenly people were making signs with fancy fonts, borders, and clip art all over them. Sure, a lot of them were horribly ugly, but you could also do some neat stuff with it, as you can with this labeler.
Everything in the box
The labeler is packed in a box that, intentionally or not, makes a very functional storage box. It contained the printer, a warranty card, instruction booklet, symbols reference card, and a starter cartridge of 1/2″ black on white tape. I was also sent a roll of glow-in-the-dark, iron-on, and blue pearlized tapes to play with. It runs on 6 AA batteries or an AC adapter, neither is included.
The LW-300 is about 6″x5.5″x2″ with a QWERTY keyboard and several special purpose keys. Many buttons have another function when the ‘shift’ key is pressed. Most of the controls are labelled clearly enough and the unit is intuitive enough that you won’t need the instructions… most of the time. The default ‘enter’ key is the typical downward bent arrow, which keeps causing me troubles because it is also used to begin a new line on this and other machines.
Front panel
Back, with cover off
Back, showing the huge green ‘cut’ button, tape slot, and power jack
You can change the looks of the labels in many ways:
Some possible variations
It can do so much that it is tough to convey it all on the controls, so you’ll want to keep the instructions handy for details on some features (or use the abbreviated reference sticker on the bottom). The screen shows a limited ‘WYSIWYG’ display- it will show the text and symbols, but not the font, frames, etc.
The entire back comes off easily allowing for very simple access to the batteries or to change the tape cartridge. A small window in the back shows you which cartridge is in place, and swapping tapes is very simple with the massive index guide and a label path that is simple to get the tape into.
I was sent several samples of tapes to play with…
Tape samples
But, as I play with this machine, I see more and more interesting uses, like…
Customizing toys with the variable text options and sizes – trucks with door signs from ‘Mark’s Construction’, or signage in a toy town. You could even use the iron-on labels in small print sizes to put words and images on doll clothing.Return address label maker – setting up a memorized label with your address and city, state, and zip on the two lines, then tinkering with the settings to make a nice, legible, compact label you can print whenever you need one or ten of them.Make two identical vertical labels and stick them back to back on the edge of a page to make an index tab you can read from either direction.
Making labels for toy vehicles (Avatar(R) RC Helicopter- review coming soon.) “Guaranteed Delivery In 30 Minutes or Less, Or We’ll Destroy Your House!”
Some special projects- pic album label, name tag, ‘night light’. The page on the left is part of the symbol reference card
Like many printers nowadays, the base machine is fairly cheap (MSRP $39.99), but you can go broke on the consumables – the tapes range from $16.99 to $21.99, but the lengths also range from 5 to 30 feet. The basic black-on-white cartridge is $17.99 for 30′. Figuring two inches per label, you can get 180 labels from a roll at a cost of about a dime a label. On the other hand, the glow-in-the-dark tape is $29.99 for 5′, making each 2″ label worth about a buck each!
My two biggest complaints about this unit are both pretty petty. My older labeler did not let you press multiple buttons, so to get a capital letter, for example, you hit ‘shift’, then the letter. This unit requires pressing multiple buttons – shift and the letter at the same time. I also keep loosing track of which button I need to advance in the menu or to choose the option I want.
Beyond those two nit-picks, this is a nice machine. It is well-built and passes the Gadgeteer Creak Test. It stores away nicely and goes a long time on a set of batteries. It is simple to use, and simple to figure out when you do get stuck.
source : the-gadgeteer.com
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Submited at Thursday, January 5th, 2012 at 4:00 pm on Uncategorized by chuck
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