Wide
Format
March 8, 2009
Océ Arizona 350 GT Printer
www.bertl.com
Copyright © 2008 BERTL, Inc.
March 8, 2009
All Rights Reserved. The license under which this document is made available and applicable law prohibit any reproduction or further transmission of any portion of this document. This
document may only be viewed electronically through the www.BERTL.com Web site and may not be stored in electronic or hard copy format. Any reproduction of trademarks is strictly
prohibited. BERTL accepts no responsibility for any inaccuracies or omissions contained in this document.
Page 5
Introduction
BERTL Inc. recently tested the new Océ Arizona® 350 GT flatbed printer. It
is based on an Océ-developed platform that combines a true flatbed design
and a separate, dedicated optional roll-to-roll capability. The Océ Arizona 350
GT printer can print on rigid media up to 98 inches wide x 49 inches long x
1.89 inches thick. The large format flatbed printer uses four-color (CMYK) UV
curable inks and Océ VariaDot imaging technology with near-photographic
image resolution to deliver true production print speeds (sellable prints) of 239
ft
2
/hr.
The Océ Arizona 350 GT printer comes in a variety of configurations. The
optional roll-to-roll module can print onto flexible media as wide as 87 inches.
The Océ Arizona 350 GT printer also offers a new white ink option that can
help expand your revenue-producing opportunities. The entry price for the
Océ Arizona 350 GT printer is $141,900 in the U.S.
OCÉ
HISTORY
Océ history goes back to 1857 in Venlo, The Netherlands, when the company
began in the pharmaceutical industry as a family owned and operated
company. In 1919, the company entered the copier market by starting the
production of blueprint material. In 1931, a new technology called the semi-
dry process was marketed under the name of Océ; the Océ name is an
abbreviation of “Ohne Componente,” which means “without components.” In
the 1960s, the demand for office copier systems grew rapidly, and Océ
focused its attention on plain paper copying, for which there was a large
demand in offices. In 1973, the first plain paper copier equipment was
introduced: the Océ 1700. In 1983, Océ introduced its first equipment for
copying large-format originals on plain paper, the Océ 7500.
In 1995, Oc
é
introduced its first digital high-volume printer/copier for office
environments and for technical documentation in wide format. Since the
1990s, Oc
é has also marketed a line of wide-format monochrome scanners
followed by wide-format color scanners ranging from 36- to 54-inches wide
scanning capability.
Print Device Features Summary
List Price
Starting at $141,900
Test version: $156,900
Printing
Method
Piezoelectric inkjet using UV
curable inks and Océ
VariaDot imaging technology
Ink System
CMYK (Cyan, Magenta,
Yellow & Black)
White Ink option (CMYK+W)
Maximum
Print Speed
239 ft
2
per hour (Flatbed)
188 ft
2
per hour (Roll Media
Option)
Maximum
Print
Resolution
Due to the Variable Dot
technology the resolution is
comparable to a 1440dpi
printer although the
addressable resolution is
lower
Color
Modes
Color printing plus optional
white
Print Heads
2 per color (CMYK), 8 Total
With White Ink Option:
2 per color (CMYK+W),
10 Total
Droplets
size
6 to 42 picoliters
Cutter None
Print Driver
Print Workflow
ONYX
®
ProductionHouse
TM
software Océ Edition, v7.2
or greater
Interface
100/1000 Mbits/s Ethernet