The Cheapskate's Guide to Printing
You want great-looking output. You don't want to spend a fortune on ink and paper. These tips and tricks can help.
Melissa Riofrio
With HP wireless printers, you could have printed this from any room in the house. Live wirelessly. Print wirelessly.
Penny-Saving Printer Settings
The printer you already own may have money-saving features built into it--simply take a few minutes to delve into its settings.
Sip, don't slurp: Many have a button right up front that sets the printer to draft mode (sometimes called Economode, InkSaver, or the like), reducing the ink or toner consumption for everyday documents (see "Printing With a Light Touch"). Other printers may require or allow you to set draft-mode printing in the driver. To see if yours does, choose Start, Printers and Faxes in Windows XP (Start, Settings, Printers in Windows 2000). Right-click the icon for your printer and check the menu for Properties or an appropriately named option. You may have to search, but you should find a way to set draft printing. Many apps, such as Word or PowerPoint, let you select draft printing; some may be able to print in high-quality mode even when the printer is set for draft mode; check the app's print dialog box.
A utility that can help you save on ink or toner is Strydent Software's $35 InkSaver (www.strydent.com or www.inksaver.com), which provides you with an intuitive slider for controlling precisely how much ink to use while printing.
Print smaller: For years, presentation pros have printed multiple pages at a reduced size on one sheet of paper. This practice, known in the industry as n-up printing, also works well for saving paper. You can access this feature by right-clicking your printer icon and choosing Printing Preferences, which brings up a dialog box where you might also find a page-scaling feature that lets you squeeze a legal-size page onto letter-size paper.
Two utilities could help you squeeze more onto a single sheet: The first is the $50 ClickBook 7 from Blue Squirrel; we lauded version 6 in last year's "Cheap Tweaks." The other is the $50 FinePrint 5 from FinePrint Software, a longtime favorite of Home Office columnist Steve Bass (see "Printer Tricks That Save Bucks").
Both of these products perform a multitude of printing tasks, from n-up printing and document scaling to print-job management, as well as the creation of layouts for brochures, calendars, greeting cards, business cards, and more.
Cheapskate Tricks That Work
Some of the best ways to control ink, toner, and paper costs are also the easiest.
Duplexing: Cut your paper expenses in half by printing on both sides of the page. Some offices equip their workgroup printers with automatic duplexers, and a few even set duplexing as the default print mode. A handful of personal printers provide automatic duplexing (requiring no manual refeeding of the sheets) as a standard or extra-cost accessory, and some present a handy on-screen guide for turning and ordering the pages. Barring such features, only a patient soul should try manual duplexing for a multipage document.
Do the toner slow dance: If your laser printer software says you're running low on toner, or if you start to see streaks in your printouts, you may still have plenty of toner left--but it's stuck in the cartridge's nooks and crannies. Remove the cartridge from the printer and slowly rock it end-to-end and then to-and-fro a few times. Do not shake it randomly or vigorously. Reinsert the cartridge into your printer. (Check your hands afterwards to make sure you don't soil your clothes with toner.)
A Guide to Business IT
Related Printers Articles
- Creating Green Technology from the Roots Up Vendors start to design IT with Mother Earth in mind.
- Asset Management Tool Roots Out Unneeded Apps The Defense Department saved money and improved security by getting tough on unneeded, unsanctioned, unsupported software and hardware. Part 3 of 5
- Polaroid PoGo Portable Photo Printer Portable printer cuts the Web out of photo sharing.
- Printer Ink: How Do You Define 'Empty'? Steve Bass finds 20 percent of the ink he paid for left in supposedly empty cartridges, but Brother has a logical (if not legal) explanation.
- 12 Must-Have Gadgets for Digital Nomads If you do your work on the run or in coffee shops, here are some devices that can make your life easier.
Best Prices on Printers
Officejet Pro L7780 All-in-One PrinterPrice: $247.35
ML-2510 Laser PrinterPrice: $49.99
LaserJet M1522nf All-In-One PrinterPrice: $229.99
LaserJet P1005 Laser PrinterPrice: $59.99
PIXMA MX700 All-In-One PrinterPrice: $104.99
Pixma MX850 All-In-One PrinterPrice: $189.99
- CDW Virtualization Center What is Virtualization and how can it help you save money? Click here to find out.
- Try it Free Center An assortment of free software and free trial offers to choose from. Check it out!
- Lenovo Laptop Showcase Find out how Lenovo IdeaPads and Thinkpads balance performance and portability. Visit the Lenovo Resource Center for more info...






