CDDVD Label Printer LPCW-100 – Shareware – Windows
Welcome to TDK corporate website. TDK is the world’s leading electronic components and devices company that has the high magnetics technology. We contribute to develop the world culture and industry through high-level creativity. This website contains information about company, CSR, IR, and Job Opportunities. Download Bluetooth Driver Ver.5.0.1.1500.zip for Windows to upgrade Bluetooth drivers for your Acer TravelMate laptop. Bluetooth Driver Ver.5.0.1.1500.zip has had 0 updates within the past 6 months. CD/DVD Label Printer LPCW-100 is a Shareware software in the category Miscellaneous developed by CDDVD Label Printer LPCW-100. It was checked for updates 31 times by the users of our client application UpdateStar during the last month. The latest version of CD/DVD Label Printer LPCW-100 is currently unknown.
Overview
CD/DVD Label Printer LPCW-100 is a Shareware software in the category Miscellaneous developed by CDDVD Label Printer LPCW-100.
The latest version of CD/DVD Label Printer LPCW-100 is currently unknown. It was initially added to our database on 11/25/2007.
CD/DVD Label Printer LPCW-100 runs on the following operating systems: Windows.
CD/DVD Label Printer LPCW-100 has not been rated by our users yet.
Write a review for CD/DVD Label Printer LPCW-100!
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TDK LPCW-50
At under £100, TDK's thermal printer is the cheapest direct-to-disc option for labelling CDs and DVDs. What's the catch?
TDK's announcement of a sub-£100 CD/DVD label printer got a lot of readers excited. That's not surprising when the only other disc printer we've looked at - Epson's Stylus Photo 950 - can't be had for much less than £330 and, at the time of our review, looked to be the cheapest disc printer on the UK market.
After the initial excitement, though, it swiftly became clear that the two machines are very different. First, the only thing that the TDK can do is print to discs, while the Epson can also print to paper up to A4 size. Also, unlike the Epson, which prints to the entire disc surface, the TDK prints at any one time only to a single box-shaped area just 74mmx16mm in size. No less significantly, the Epson prints in full colour, but the TDK can print only one colour at a time. A single black cartridge is included in-pack, but cartridges in blue, red and silver are also available. To print in a different colour, it is necessary to change to a different cartridge. But, whatever the TDK's shortcomings, it's available for less than a third of the price of the Epson. With that in mind, how does it fair under the microscope?
Conclusion
The TDK is okay for quick and dirty jobs that don't require full-colour/full-disc printing. But that rules it out for folk who take their DVD production seriously. But it is cheap. The machine has inherent limitations, and these are made worse by TDK's ill-thought out software. The problems aren't enormous, but the software is needlessly complex and limiting and requires swift sorting out.
It's also important to realise that the outlay on cartridges will mount quickly with heavy use (though the same is true generally of inkjets, as well). The cheapest TDK cartridges we've seen were £6.76 (inc VAT, ex carriage) from www.scan.co.uk. Each cartridge is claimed by TDK to be good, on average, for 40 discs if printing to a single area and 20 if printing to both areas. That makes the per-disc print cost at least 17p, or more likely 34p, even for those who shop around for cartridges.
All this said, a lot of people are going to buy a TDK and, hopefully, they'll be the patient sort and only expect to use it for simple jobs. Pros and perfectionists, on the other hand, should consider an Epson 950, or wait until our review next month of a competing inkjet disc printer, the Odixion DigiPrinter. This is expected to sell for around £150, which might sound cheap, but not when you know that the underlying printer is a Canon S200 that typically sells for under £60.
After the initial excitement, though, it swiftly became clear that the two machines are very different. First, the only thing that the TDK can do is print to discs, while the Epson can also print to paper up to A4 size. Also, unlike the Epson, which prints to the entire disc surface, the TDK prints at any one time only to a single box-shaped area just 74mmx16mm in size. No less significantly, the Epson prints in full colour, but the TDK can print only one colour at a time. A single black cartridge is included in-pack, but cartridges in blue, red and silver are also available. To print in a different colour, it is necessary to change to a different cartridge. But, whatever the TDK's shortcomings, it's available for less than a third of the price of the Epson. With that in mind, how does it fair under the microscope?
Conclusion
The TDK is okay for quick and dirty jobs that don't require full-colour/full-disc printing. But that rules it out for folk who take their DVD production seriously. But it is cheap. The machine has inherent limitations, and these are made worse by TDK's ill-thought out software. The problems aren't enormous, but the software is needlessly complex and limiting and requires swift sorting out.
It's also important to realise that the outlay on cartridges will mount quickly with heavy use (though the same is true generally of inkjets, as well). The cheapest TDK cartridges we've seen were £6.76 (inc VAT, ex carriage) from www.scan.co.uk. Each cartridge is claimed by TDK to be good, on average, for 40 discs if printing to a single area and 20 if printing to both areas. That makes the per-disc print cost at least 17p, or more likely 34p, even for those who shop around for cartridges.
All this said, a lot of people are going to buy a TDK and, hopefully, they'll be the patient sort and only expect to use it for simple jobs. Pros and perfectionists, on the other hand, should consider an Epson 950, or wait until our review next month of a competing inkjet disc printer, the Odixion DigiPrinter. This is expected to sell for around £150, which might sound cheap, but not when you know that the underlying printer is a Canon S200 that typically sells for under £60.
Yianni Kyriacou
For the full review, see the April 2003 issue of Computer Video.