Wayne Fox Offline Upload & Sell: Off
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Max width is certainly the most significant difference. I'm guessing along with that is a reduced footprint for the 2880 if space is a concern.
I don't have a 2880, but do use a couple of 3800's. I believe black and white printing would be nearly identical, both have advanced B&W mode and both use the same black inks.
2880 has the more recent vivid magenta inkset, the same inkset as in the current 7880/9800/11880 printers. However, despite not having this inkset, the 3800 output is outstanding, and to me is better than the other printers Epson produced using the K3 inkset because of improved screening (4800/7800/9800).
I believe screening and dithering technology of the 2880 is probably a generation ahead of 3800 -the link provided from LL predates the introduction of the 2880 by a year and a half, so the improved dithering referenced there would be in relation to 48/78/9800 printers.
The 2880 head is a generation newer than the 3800, with the smallest droplet size down to 3 picoliters vs. 3.5 ... the smaller droplets assist in improving the screening algorithms. The result is 2880 is capable of what they call 5760x1440 "optimized" resolution vs. the 3880 at 2880x1440. However despite all of these advances I'm not sure there will be any significant differences observable in output from the two printers.
Another key advance for users in head technology is to address nozzle clogging. I'm not sure if the 2880 has anything new on the 3800 here, but the 3800 introduced several key changes for Epson to address clogging, and has proven to be quite reliable and nearly clog free for most users since it's introduction.
Both printers feed photo and matt black ink to the head, and require the black channel in the head to be cleared when switching. I believe the total ink consumption is similar, but this amounts to about 10% of the 2880's 11mil cartridge , where it is only about 2% of the 3800's 80ml cartridge. Much more expensive to switch, since the cost/ml of ink of the 3800 is far less, due to the large cartridge sizes.
The 3800 is considered a pro level printer, so it may include a more robust design and be more durable.
As mentioned, if you consider you get 7x more ink with the 3800, the cost of the acutal printer is about the same . By the time you finish the 2nd set of ink cartridges in the 3800 you will have gone through 10 or 12 sets of ink in the 2880 (or more). By that time the 3800 has actually saved you money.
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