With the announcement of the Brenva HD production inkjet press, Xerox is showing its first product to be jointly developed from start to finish by the combined Xerox and Impika development teams. The device is a cut-sheet color inkjet printer capable of speeds of up to 182 letter/197 A4 images/min. At first glance, it looks like an iGen, and though it is built on an iGen frame, it will become clear that under the covers the differences are extensive.
The initial application target is likely to be black and white to color conversion, as well as applications like transaction, direct mail, and books because the device will support uncoated stocks (regular and inkjet treated) at launch. The supported media range is uncoated stocks from 60 to 220 gsm. Supported finishing at launch will be the BDFNX signature booklet maker and the Xerox Production Stacker (which can handle 5,500 sheets and is designed to be unloaded while running for uninterrupted operation).
Additional important aspects of the Brenva HD production inkjet press are:
- Inks and drying: The system uses water-based (aqueous) pigment inks and a new drying technology.
- An in-line spectrophotometer that allows the user to create custom paper profiles (about 40 Xerox-provided profiles will be available at launch).
- Integrated jet-out detector and correction systems automatically adjust for clogged inkjet nozzles.
- Four variable drop sizes that provide flexibility with quality settings and ink consumption.
- Duty cycle and target volume: The product’s duty cycle is around 6 million but Xerox anticipates that target average monthly print volume will be between one and two million.
- Black only mode: When monochrome printing is required, the device has a black-only mode.
- The Windows-based FreeFlow front end offers object oriented rendering for text and graphics so that both types can be reproduced most effectively.
- Ink estimation and tracking tools allow the user to accurately predict ink consumption and cost.
- Footprint and format: A relatively small footprint (22’6(W)x6’8″ (H) by 4’0″ (D)) as well as a sizable maximum supported sheet (14.3x20.5″) help position the product versus competitive units like Canon’s VarioPrint i300.
The Brenva HD production inkjet press will be available later this year at a list price of $649,000 (this includes one sheet-feed module, a FreeFlow Print Server, the printer module, and one Xerox Production Stacker). Two early customer sites (one in Europe and the other in the U.S.) will be installed by April 1st. Order taking and fulfillment will start in Europe first at drupa (May 31st to June 10th, Düsseldorf, Germany), where Xerox will show two systems. For the U.S., order taking will start at Graph Expo (Sept. 25-28, Orlando, Fla.).
At the same time as the Brenva announcement, Xerox also announced a new roll-fed inkjet product called Trivor. Xerox’s Trivor 2400 is capable of 551 ft./168 m./min. speed in color and 656 ft./200 m./min. in monochrome. Its Xerox IJ Print Server was developed in partnership with EFI and will handle multiple data streams. Availability and list price will be revealed at drupa.
InfoTrends Opinion
With Xerox’s Brenva, another product joins the z, and this time it’s a cut-sheet offering. This definitely heats up the competition since prior to this announcement only Canon had a true cut-sheet B3-format product in this space. Leveraging iGen for some components certainly helped Xerox get this product to market more quickly, yet in that sense they made a similar decision to what Canon did with the Océ VarioPrint i300. Both products can benefit from feeding and finishing components that already exist and can be integrated into the platform. The focus on uncoated stocks at the start makes sense, since there is a lot of opportunity for moving black-and-white volume from cut-sheet monochrome toner devices, particularly in applications that leverage a pre-printed form.
Potential buyers and early users will certainly push hard for coated stocks, but as with other potential features, there is a lot more that can (and will) be added to the Brenva platform in the future. This announcement is a good step for Xerox because it reinforces its inkjet presence in the Zone of Disruption (where it already competes with Rialto) and increases the already significant market activity around inkjet.
For an explanation of the Zone of Disruption, please refer to the blog entitled: "Activity Brewing in the Zone of Disruption."
- Companies:
- Xerox Corp.