The Manhattan area of New York has one of the highest concentrations of business offices anywhere in the world; so, logic would have it that Manhattan is where you would find a high percentage of the world’s photocopiers and computer printers. Office workers use these ubiquitous machines with hardly a thought as to how they work – they know how to put paper in and how to take their copies or printouts away; some might also know how to clear a paper jam; but, a goodly number only know to seek assistance when the machine stops working and demands to be fed some Toner In Manhattan NY.
Do They Even Know What Toner Is?
Back in the beginning, the toner for Manhattan NY was a dirty black powder that someone from “Office Services” (or, back then, even the “Copying Department”) would pour from a bottle into a reservoir container located somewhere in the bowels of the copier or printer. Now that copiers and printers have progressed (and become considerably lower in purchase price); they have almost reached a point where there is one near to every desk or workstation and there is no need for an “expert” to rush to the scene whenever more toner is needed. Today’s machines are simply fed by inserting a, pre-filled, sealed container of toner into the correct, easily accessible slot. The container for this form of Toner For Manhattan NY is known as a toner cartridge and each brand of copier or laser printer produces and markets its own brand of toner – along with dire warnings against using any substitute brand.
Another of today’s improvements is that the powder is no longer exclusively black; meaning we can now copy and print in full color (OK; for the more technically minded, when we work with color, we actually mix cyan, magenta, yellow and black – CMYK – to give us the visual appearance of “full color”); of course, to achieve this, we now need cartridges of colored toner.
Must We Use The Makers’ Cartridges?
The black toner itself is based on powdered carbon; mixed with additives and, when printing, the toner particles are melted under heat applied by the machine so that, when they “hit” the printing paper, they are fused, or bound, to the paper. In theory, just so long as the cartridge design is exactly the same as the original and the toner chemicals have the same properties as the branded one, there is no reason why our printers and copiers may not use substitute Toner In Manhattan NY. However, this may well void manufacturers’ warranties and can cause problems both within the machine and over the print quality.


