Why Zelle Is The Best Payment Method To Choose When You Sell Your Toner

It’s 2018 and if you’re still getting paid with Paypal or by check, you’re risking running behind the times. Toner Connect is proud to introduce our newest payment method, Zelle!

We wouldn’t want you to make a decision without more information or research so here’s a little more about Zelle.

What is Zelle?

It’s a new method of sending and receiving money by linking your bank account with your email address or phone number. 

If you already use any sort of cash or quickpay app, you may already be familiar with Zelle.

How does it work?

First, visit Zelle’s website to check to see if your bank account is one of their partners (just about every major bank  or credit union in the U.S. is a partner) and download your bank or credit union’s mobile app. Login and confirm your identity and register.

 

 

Why use Zelle when selling to Toner Connect?

Safety

Zelle uses your bank’s authentification and monitoring features.

Speed

Zelle payments can reach your bank account in minutes. You don’t have to wait to receive your mailed check in 2-3 few business days.

Scenario Example

Jenny ships out her toner order to us on Monday January 8th. We receive, inspect and mark the order as complete on Friday January 12th. Then Jenny’s check is mailed out on Friday January 12th but Jenny doesn’t receive her check in the mail until Tuesday January 16th.

If Jenny chose Zelle, however, as her payment method instead of check, she could have received her full payment within minutes of us completing the order on Friday January 12th!

No Fees

Unlike PayPal, your order will not have any fees deducted from it. You’ll get your full amount every time and never have to worry about going through holds and refunds on your PayPal account.

Scenario Example

Ben sells his toner (quoted at $100) to us on Wednesday November 10th and is paid the $96.80 ($100 original quote – Paypal fees of $0.30 plus 2.9 percent of $100).

Ben ships his toner on the same day and we receive it on Monday November 15th. Unfortunately Ben has less toner at his home than he originally submits on his form and doesn’t ship all his items. Ben’s order is adjust to $70 and Ben has to issue a refund of $30 which could take up to 2 business days to arrive in an account.

zelle comparison chart

Conclusion

Zelle is not only the quickest way to receive your money after your order has been completed but also has no transaction fees.

If you have any questions about Zelle, visit their website or contact us

get paid for your toner button

 

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Where To Sell Your Empty Used Toner Cartridges

It’s no secret that you can get money for your unwanted unused toner. But did you know that you can cash in on your used toner cartridges too? Even if it’s the humanitarian thing to do and recycle your toner cartridges for free, throwing some cash into the mix doesn’t hurt. You can choose to sell online as many companies offer free shipping or in store as some stores offer in store credit. We’ve rounded up our favorite picks to get you started on your journey to extra cash and for the folks looking just to save the planet without monetary gain, we’ve got you covered with some of our favorite and easiest ways to recycle.

eBay

The all-time classic place to sell anything, used cartridges are more than welcome on the eBay marketplace. It’s pretty easy to use and even though the website looks a little outdated, you still have a chance to make a good amount selling those unwanted cartridges. Just post some photos of your item in good condition and plug the specs in the ad so folks know exactly what you’re selling. These specs should include stuff like the model number, color and brand. The pro tip is to try selling in bulk to get around constant shipping costs but selling one at a time still works either way!

Buy-Back Companies

These companies buy your used cartridges and most times pay well for it. A great option for schools looking to encourage children to care for their environment, buy-back sites pay for large amounts of recyclable empty toner cartridges. For example, Cartridges for Kids and FundingFactory pay cash to schools and organizations looking to get rid of their unwanted used cartridges. They offer free shipping and ultimately a new stream of money for these establishments. Other buy back sites include NeedEmpty and UsRecycleInk that offer competitive prices and free shipping. Many of these companies advise customers to box their cartridges well and be sure their padding is efficient because if the cartridge is damaged during shipping, then there’s no deal.  

Rewards Programs

Popular office supply stores like Office Depot and Staples encourage folks to donate their used cartridges for store credit towards their next purchase. You can turn in as many as 10 (or sometimes more) at a time, so check with your office supply store to be sure. It’s easy to send in your used cartridges; just head over to the store and hand it to an assistant at the register or you can also request a shipping label online. Once the cartridges are received, you get money credited to your account for your next buy. This is a great option for the people who may want to stick with the familiar brands while saving the planet.

Craigslist

Almost anything could be sold off Craigslist, from used cars to used toner cartridges. You can be location specific and limit your post to only folks in your area. That makes it easier to evade those shipping costs and deal with a real person instead of a system. The biggest downside is the common knowledge that you cannot trust everyone on Craigslist.  Therefore, be cautious of who you share personal and location specific information with.

Buy and Sell Apps

On the go apps like LetGo and Offerup are two alternatives to eBay and Craigslist that make selling your items online feel like a breeze. Just download the app, upload your photos to the site’s marketplace, and wait for potential buyers to reach out. Users can list their items for free and have the option of being location specific when selling their item. Empty toner cartridges are regular items for sale so be sure to take a look at some of the ads you see to know how to alter yours in order to attract buyers.

Manufacture Take-backs

Companies like Brother, Lexmark, Dell and Canon offer their customers an option to recycle their toner cartridges for free. You can request a shipping label online and mail in those empty cartridges. The companies only accept OEM cartridges and even though they don’t offer any cash back options, you’ll feel loads better knowing you’re saving the landfills from being over loaded. Even warehouse club super store Costco offers their customers the option of mailing or dropping in their empty cartridges, so check with your local store just in case.

Other Recycling Options

There are a number of ways to properly dispose of your empty toner cartridges and a helpful place to start is Earth911 where you can find the options nearest you. Other sites like RecycleNet are also useful to match you with recycling services. If you want to recycle and make some extra cash, go for it – any one of our recommendations is a great way to start. If you want to save the planet out of the goodness of your heart, no coins included, that’s great too! The point is to keep our environment safe and the cartridges out of the landfills. In the event that you’re unsure of how to dispose of your empty cartridges properly, don’t hesitate to reach out to us and we will try our best to help!

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5 Proven Ways to Earn Money Online without Owning a Website

Yes, you can earn money online without even knowing that WordPress or any website builder exists. Depending on your skill level and interest, you can make a decent four-figure income every month.

 If you can proofread articles. Follow 20-minute guides. Take photos. Speak two languages. Type fast on your keyboard. Shop for things, or play online games. Then you can earn money online without owning a website. From a few hundred dollars a month to over $20 an hour.

 Let me show you five proven ways you can earn money online even if owning a website puts you off. Read on.

Proofreading

Got an eagle eye? Get paid to proofread articles, books, business documents and other papers. Proofreaders earn up to $17.50 per hour. An editor has reported annual earnings of over $43,000. You don’t need to own a website to start earning as a proofreader.

 

I’ve listed websites that pay you to proofread articles, academic papers, business documents and more. You’d work remotely. Some companies demand that you have prior experience working as an editor; others don’t.

 

You can proofread for pay here:

 

  • American Journal Experts (AJE): Handles academic or academic-related proofreading and editing. You can only apply for a specific field. They want experts.

    Some of the fields in their list include chemistry and material science, engineering, life sciences, earth sciences, business and more.
  • Domainite: You won’t need to prove any prior editing experience, but you’d take a test to join them. They pay every week via PayPal.
  • Edit 911: Serves corporate and academic clients. You’d have to be a Ph.D. to qualify to work with them.
  • Enago: You must have five years prior experience to work with them. Enago jobs are in academic fields, and they prefer editors with Masters or Ph.D. research experience.
  • Proofreading Services: Hires worldwide. They provide competitive pay and your work hours are flexible.

 

In short, whether you’re a PhD or just entering college you can start earning as a proofreader. It doesn’t even matter what country you come from. Just have a knack for spotting and fixing grammatical flaws and the cash is yours.

Paid-Per-Task Jobs

OK, you don’t know the difference between “there” and “their,” but you can do something else better than the grammar lords. You can earn money online doing tasks.

 

Short tasks are jobs you can complete in a short period. These assignments could be taking surveys, watching videos, online research and more. A majority of these positions won’t require you to be on your phone.

 

Jobs that require you to be on the phone would need a quiet environment. Kids are not always calm if you work from home as a mom. And your roommate won’t like you hushing her every few minutes to receive or make phone calls.

 

Some sites pay you to take surveys, watch videos, shop online, play games, redeem gift cards and coupons, complete some specific tasks, read emails, and more. Examples are InboxDollars, CashCrate, FusionCash, and Swagbucks.

 

Other sites offer all or some of the tasks above, and then some. You may earn income from content creation, editing, internet research, content moderation, data categorization, content creation, and data collection. Examples include CrowdFlower, Amazon Mechanical Turk, ClickWorker, and OneSpace.

Apps That Pay You Money

The Google Play houses more than 2.8 million apps and the Apple’s App Store 2.2 million. You’re probably thinking “There’s got to be money somewhere in this sea of applications.”

 

Yes, there’s cash in the apps cache!

 

Let’s dig ‘em out.

 

  • Field Agent: Earn cash on your phone completing numerous short assignments. You can make between $3 to $12 per task. You’ll be doing jobs like product reviews, checking shelf availability, verifying display compliance, and the like. They pay via PayPal.

    Brands like Hershey’s, Tyson, and Target partner with Field Agent. The app is available for Android and iOS.
  • EasyShift: Earn money by completing shifts in your mobile phone. Check prices, verify if a product is in stock, take photographs of store displays, and check prices of items. Complete your shift and get paid via PayPal within 48 hours. Expect to earn between $2 to $20 per assignment you submit.
  • Ibotta: Ibotta pays you money to shop. That’s it. So you can buy all the things you’d usually shop for and then get cash-back on them.
  • GigWalk: Complete quick assignments on your mobile device and get paid. All you’d do is register, request a task, complete it, and get paid. Most times, your assignment would be to verify geographic landmarks, transportation options or street signs.

 

You’re flooded with options here. You may want to try out Surveys On The Go, CheckPoints, App Trailers, GymPact, ESPN Streak For The Cash, and more.

Transcribing and Language Translation

If you have fast fingers and sharp-hearing you can turn that into cash online. Become a transcriptionist. Transcription jobs have three categories; medical, legal and general.

 

Or do you speak and write in two languages almost too well? Become a translator.

 

So whether you understand one language exceptionally well or you understand two (or more) languages, you can earn. You can make up to $25 per hour as a transcriptionist.

 

You’ll need to get familiar with Express Scribe if you’d be transcribing. Websites likes Transcribe Anywhere, TranscribeMe, Quicktate, Rev, Birch Creek Communications, and CastingWords.

Sell Used Items Online

You can sell used items like your toner and ink cartridges. You can also sell your old electronics using an app like Decluttr.

 

You can sell your old items online via Amazon Trade-in, and get an Amazon gift card. Best Buy also has a trade-in program; just like Amazon, you’ll get a Best Buy gift card.

 

If you’d instead get paid via PayPal, check, or other gift cards then use Nextworth or Gazelle. You can get paid via PayPal, check, or Target gift card if you trade your item in with Nextworth. Gazelle offers Amazon gift card as its third payment option.

 

eBay Valet pays you via PayPal. This service doesn’t pay instant money though, but you don’t have to do the selling. Just send your item to eBay, wait, and get paid.

 

If you have unused toners, Toner Connect pays you the best market value. Click here to sell your unused toners and ink cartridges.

 

 

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Why Compatibles Will Never Replace OEM

If you own a laser printer, then you’re familiar with replacing your toner cartridges. These replacements can be pricey, especially if you’re a business. Since your demand for printed documents is higher than average, your price tag will be higher. To move around those high costs, you may want to consider exploring all your shopping options.

The manufacturer’s option for toner (or OEMs) are the higher priced option. Then there are re-manufactured OEMs and then, compatibles.

To get a better look at the price difference, you’ll see the popular brand Cannon selling their CRG 137 Black Toner for average $75.00. The compatible or re-manufactured version is $25.00.

That’s a $50 reason for users to choose the cheaper option.

Before you jump for joy at the prospect of getting more bang for your buck, remember, if it sounds too good to be true …

Let’s back up a bit. We’ll take a look at why the prices are so different and you will find that compatibles are not ready to replace OEMs on the market anytime soon.

 

What are OEM toner cartridges?

 

Considered the crème de la crème of toner cartridges, OEM toner is from your printer’s manufacturer.

So, if you have a Xerox printer, your OEM toner is by Xerox.

OEM toner cartridges are reliable, precise and produce the highest quality in printing. They are compatible with your printer and thus is your printer’s best asset.

Manufacturers encourage users to use these original cartridges. They decrease the chances of printer malfunction and lower the printer’s fail rate. That and if your printer needed servicing, you won’t shy away from the manufacturers’ warranty for fear of using a different ink.

OEM toner is the best choice for your printer as they are 100% compatible with your printer. So, if the manufacturer makes improvement in the quality of toner, you would be able to have it

However, OEMs do not have recyclable parts and getting rid of them may be hard. We can help and we pay. At Toner Connect, you send us your unused toner cartridges and we add dollars to your pocket.

That cash might be a great help since OEM’s reflect quality in its price. Carrying a higher price tag, toner users may sway towards the cheaper option. Their re- manufactured parts.

 Re-manufactured OEMs

An option to avoid the high price of OEM cartridges is re-manufactured OEM cartridges. This is when businesses and online companies decide to repurpose the original cartridge. They would clean and refill used OEM cartridges to re-sell.

Some buyers feel a little better knowing that the parts for the re-manufactured toner came from the original. But there is still a chance your printer may malfunction.

Toner manufacturers are forever changing and improving their quality of toner. Re-manufactured toner will not reflect those improvements and your printer could suffer from it.

Even more discouraging is purchasing re-manufactured OEM from less than reputable brands. It increases your chances of facing printing problems. Opting for re-manufactured toner might seem like a smart financial decision but it’s a risky one that can affect you printer’s productivity.

 

Compatibles

They are the toner cartridges that have been created, filled and tested to be compatible with your printer. Compatibles use all recyclable parts and their prices are noticeably lower than OEMs. Due to patent and copyright laws, compatibles are not able to use parts from OEM cartridges. So, sellers attempt to re-create parts that might work well.

You get what you pay for though. The printing quality of compatibles like that of OEMs and chances are your printer will have a higher fail ratel. They are the least popular option for businesses, as the printing quality is not up to par. Plus, continuous use of generic products can mean investing in a new printer too soon.

And like re-manufactured toner, you would have to find a reputable seller. You can never be sure which company is truthful about their testing methods.

Even though the cheaper option, you should consider your need for your printer before you decide on compatibles.

Do you have plans to use your printer for a long time? How much do you expect to print per day? What quality of printing are you looking for? Answering these questions can give you some insight on how to buy your next replacement toner.

 

Why OEMs will never be replaced.

Selecting the perfect replacement toner option for your printing needs is an important step in your budgeting plans. You can either bite the bullet and invest in the OEM versions to ensure your printer’s productivity. Or you can go with the cheaper option that may or may not cause your printer harm.

The market for toner cartridges can vary. However, manufacturers aren’t losing sleep on their compatible counterparts. Popular recognizable brands like Hp, Canon and Xerox won’t be running out of customers soon. Their brand is familiar and their business customers are loyal.

Your best choice for toner is ultimately a personal decision. If you are set on having a budget friendly price, compatibles are your way to go. Just remember that the end printing product will not be as high quality as if you were using an original. Take into account that if you use OEM cartridge and are having trouble discarding your unused ones, we will pay you for them!

 

Have OEM unopened toner laying around? Why don’t you see what it’s worth? 
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5 Trash Bound Items You Can Turn To Money Now

You can turn trash into cash. It happens every day. Everyday people earn either hundreds of US dollars or some beer money on the side, from waste. You can even decide to make this a full-time income source!

Back in 2010, the average waste produced by each American per day was 4.5 pounds. Fast forward to 2014. The U.S. was producing 258 million tons of municipal solid waste (MSW).

The U.S. recycled only 34.6 percent (i.e., 89 million tons) of its MSW. 33 million tons of trash was burned to recover energy. And then 136 million tons ended in landfills.

How can you turn your waste into money? Let’s dig for some cash in your trash.

Cash Out on Old Clothes and Shoes

Got any idea how much clothes Americans throw away every year? On a per-head count, every year, more than 68 pounds of clothing go to waste!

In fact, ten percent of the wastes in cities like New York and Chicago is textile. In the U.S., 6.3 percent of wastes are from clothes. According to Forbes, American families spend an average of $1,700 on clothing items yearly.

Americans spend significantly on clothing. Psychology Today says that Americans spend more than $100 billion on shoes, watches, and jewelry. That’s more than they spend on higher education.

The U.S. apparel market is the world’s largest clothes market. It values at $359 billion in 2016.

Every year, 85 percent of clothes you throw in the trash goes to landfills. That’s 13 million tons of textiles annually. You can reduce this waste by selling your old textiles – plus the cash reward in it for you!

The U.S. clothes resale industry stands at $4 billion in revenue. So, if you have old, trash-bound clothes, you can sell them to:

  • thredUp: Handles everything for you. Request their bag and send your items. Whatever they don’t take is donated to charity. You’ll earn 80 percent of your clothes’ resale value, which you can get as shopping credits, or via PayPal.
  • Material World: Get gift cards in exchange for your designer clothes. Use their pricing estimator to find out which items to send in. Material World would send you a quote. They’ll also send you a free trade-in bag once you’ve filled their form. Send them your items and receive an electronic gift card.
    Ensure to go through their guidelines before using this service. They are highly selective.

  • The Real Real: Pays 70 percent of the price of your clothes once they sell them. Just sign up and tell them the number of items you’ll be sending them. You’ll receive a shipping label from them. On receipt, they’d authenticate your clothes, photograph, and then put prices on them.

    If you’re sending ten items, they offer a White Glove Service, where they send a Merchandise Manager to pick up your clothes from your home.

There are lots of places you can sell your old clothes online. Try Tradesy, ThreadFlip, and Poshmark.

Turn Your Trash into Cash

Nothing is more trash-bound than trash itself. Scrap metal. Junk mail. Old cooking oil. Cardboard boxes. Wine corks and bottles. The list goes on.

 

Looking to turn your garbage disposal day into payday? Here’s how:

 

  • Wine corks and bottles: List wine corks and bottles for DIY artists and projects on eBay. Make sure to list the bottles and wine corks separately to maximize profit.

    Corks sell for 10 cents a piece and bottles for 50 cents. Fancy wine bottles (like cobalt blue bottles), would sell for $5 a bottle. You’ll find bottles listed in batches of ten or twelve; corks are in ten.

    You may prefer to sell your wine corks to Yemm & Hart. Contact them to get a quote.

     
  • Scrap and pieces of metals: If you gather enough of them, you can sell off a bunch of scraps for extra bucks. Old locks, copper wiring, metal pipes, etc. You can sell them on GoScrap.
  • Miscellaneous renewable and reusable items: You can earn points with Recyclebank by helping recyclers haul recyclables from your community. You’d then redeem the points for cash rewards. You could also earn from Box Tops.
  • Cardboard boxes: You can sell off your used or unused cardboard boxes at Boxcycle. Create a free listing and be found when someone in your area wants the boxes. They pay via PayPal.
  • Cooking oil: If you live in Vermont or New Hampshire, you could turn your old cooking oil into money. EvironTek collects your cooking oil and converts them into biodiesel. You’ll earn $1 for every gallon and extra an $25 if you make referrals.
  • Junk mails: The Small Business Knowledge Center pays to collect your junk mail! They specifically want correspondences relating to mortgage, lending, insurance, travel industries, credit, mortgage, financial, banking, and telecoms.

    All you have to do is sign up and become a consumer panelist. You’ll earn points for each mail you send them and redeem those points for cash in the form of gift cards. The Better Business Bureau rates The Small Business Knowledge Center A+.

Now you know. Nothing is a waste. Trash is cash.

The Alchemy of Turning Aluminum to Gold

If you knew the value of used aluminum (i.e., soda and beer) cans, you wouldn’t throw them away. OK, you wouldn’t turn them into gold – the metal – but you can earn money from them.

 

In fact, the Aluminum Association says that “Aluminum is the most recyclable of all materials. Discarded aluminum is more valuable than any other item in the recycling bin.”

 

Every year $800 million is paid out by the aluminum industry for recycled cans. The U.S. aluminum recycling industry is worth $1 billion.

 

Believe it or not, Americans throw away a billion dollar worth of aluminum cans to landfills every other year. Talk of literally wasting money.

 

Ten states in the U.S., by law, set the price of aluminum cans at a minimum of $0.05 to $0.1 a piece. These laws are called “bottle laws.”

 

Outside of the “bottle law” states, you’ll be battling the forces of demand and supply. Based on price estimates from Scrap Sale USA, you’d be selling over 30 cans for a paltry $0.35. Or less.

Image credit: Waste 360

 

In states with “bottle laws,” you’d make between $1.5 to $3 for 30 aluminum cans. That’s a staggering 430 to 850 percent more profit than you’d earn in other states.

 

States with the “bottle bill” include

 

  • California
  • Connecticut
  • Hawaii
  • Iowa
  • Maine
  • Massachusetts
  • Michigan
  • New York
  • Oregon
  • Vermont

 

If you live in one of the states above, you could enjoy $400 to $200 extra income by collecting aluminum cans. And if you make this your business, you could be earning a whopping $30 per hour!

 

You can find local aluminum recyclers in your state or area on yellow pages. Use websites like Recycling Center as well.

Cash from Used or Unused Toners and Ink Cartridges


Image Credit: Alibaba

 

If you work from home or run a small business, then you’re probably consuming a ton of ink or toner cartridges. Instead of sending those used toners and ink cartridges to landfills, turn them to cash.

 

You can earn quick cash from Evolve Recycling with your used ink and toner cartridges. They pay via check. They have a price list that shows you exactly what you’ll earn, but you must send in a minimum of 20 items to qualify.

 

If you have unused toner and ink cartridges, Toner Connect gives you the best market price. The selling process is as simple as counting one, two, three. And your money will be paid even before you ship your item. Find out more here.

Breed Dollars from Worms

Image credit: Pixabay

 

I almost heard you scream.

 

“Worms?!”

 

Oh, yea. Worms.

 

I know. Those wriggly creatures live in your rotten trash or dirty mud.

 

But they can leave some cash in your account. All yours to spend.

 

People farm these wriggly creatures. And it’s lucrative. But you have many ways to earn money from them. You can make money from collecting worms from your trash and natural environment.

 

Worms have many uses, but fish baiting is the most common. Gardeners also use worms to fertilize and aerate their soils. Worms serve as pet food for small animals like snakes, birds, and fish.

 

Worms could sell for about $1.5 a dozen. Prices depend on your worms’ size, type, and the market you serve. On Amazon, for example, 300 red worms sell for $17.

 

According to WormsEtc, the U.S. Postal Service has the best survival rates for worms. So if you plan on selling online, the USPS is your best shipping option. Just like on Amazon, you can also sell on eBay, or find other ways to market your wriggly creatures.

To Wrap It Up

You probably have more options now than you can act on. Start with one. Earn cash from it. Take on another one.

 

If you have a bunch of toners that you haven’t used, let Toner Connect pay you cash. That’s some quick money without stress. Now, identify other items here you can sell. Repeat until you have turned all your trash into cash.

 

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Why Importing Your Toners From The U.S. Matters

Buying US-made toners have certain advantages over those manufactured by competitors from Mexico, Brazil, China or other countries. Toner cartridges are not born equal.

If you haven’t gotten into the habit of asking your toner supplier where s/he imports her toners or inks from, you might want to start developing that practice now. And if you’re the importer of your toner or ink cartridges, you should be bothered with the country they come from.

As with many industries, toner cartridge competitors from other countries give the US some stiff competition. OK, we can argue all day about the Japanese Toyota being better (or worse) than US-made cars, but with toner cartridges the winner is obvious.

Blindly Buying the Dust

Economists and business analysts like to tell us about how today’s buyers are so savvy and how they know the market better than ever.

And that’s true. To an extent.

Most toner buyers are buying blinding. Blinded by price, usually. Sometimes buying cheap is cheap. Prices may, in fact, reflect value. Making a buying decision solely on the money you’ll spend out of pocket could turn around to bite you.

So what else should you consider when buying toners? And why should you buy them from the US? Let’s explore answers to these questions.

Dangers of Buying Substandard Toners

We use toners in our homes and usually don’t consider them dangerous. However, the International Agency for Research on Cancer has classified toner dust as a 2B carcinogen — particles that are capable of causing cancer to humans. Substandard toners are more likely to expose you to danger.

Carbon Black Dangers: Substandard toner cartridges could easily break, and toner would leak. This leak may expose you to inhaling potentially cancer-causing toner dust.

Carbon Monoxide Dangers: The London Hazards Center says that overheated toners, especially those in confined spaces, emit carbon monoxide. Exposure to this dangerous gas could cause drowsiness, a spike in pulse rate, and severe headaches.

Substandard toners may demand more energy than usual for your printer to work. The excess heat required by your toner would cause carbon monoxide emissions.

Ozone Dangers: Toners of poor quality may emit ozone in high quantities during electrical discharges. If you expose yourself often to ozone you’re likely to suffer health problems like nausea, headaches, and dermatitis; ozone may also cause your throat, eyes, and lungs to have irritations.

 

Why are American Made Toners the Best?

It’s not uncommon for consumers who want premium quality printing to opt for Made-in-the-USA toners. However, it’s NOT just the toner quality that attracts buyers to American toners.

Desirable characteristics such as color integrity, ongoing R&D, product purity, and archivability are some of the other attributes that set US-made toners head and shoulder above their competitors.

Printer cartridges made in America are less likely to leak. Policies and industry best practices guiding cartridge manufacturing in the USA demand significantly higher standards compared to foreign manufacturers. Spending an extra $1 or 3 dollars may save you from health problems and other dangers that come with toner exposure.

Am I saying that toners made in the US are always great? No. That’s not the point. Some substandard US-made toners may slip through, but this isn’t the norm. And toners not imported from the US are not always bad. But the odds are in favor of toners from the US when you weigh health, toner quality, archivability, and other essential factors.

Cartridge recycling businesses like Virginia based Impression Products (which recently won a legal battle against Lexmark) collect used cartridges, refill them with toners, and resell them for significantly cheaper than OEMs sell them. So you have the opportunity of selling off your used toner cartridges — which is an environmentally friendly thing to do — and buying remanufactured products that are as good (or nearly as good) as OEM toners.

 

The Stiff Competition Benefits You

The US is home to the most prominent and most reputable printer brands and toner remanufacturing companies. America’s capitalist market demands that businesses compete for your money. Fighting for your cash drives companies to deliver better solutions.

Brother, HP, Lexmark and other OEMs have research facilities aimed at improving their product’s quality. On the other hand, you have remanufacturing companies like Impression Products that are driving prices down while keeping toner quality high.

In short, buying made-in-USA OEM, remanufactured, or compatible toners assure you of getting the best solutions possible as companies compete for your money.

 

Avoid Fraud

One risk that can come from buying overseas is obviously fraud. Once you send these companies funds you may or may not get what you ordered. It’s not very likely but it has happened in the past with some of our customers.

Buying remanufactured toner cartridges abroad can also damage your printers because they seem to leak toner when they spin in the printer.

US-based remanufactured cartridge makers wholly disassemble, and then thoroughly inspected, cleaned, and then recouple their products after filling it with the highest quality toner mixture in the market. Toner remanufactured in the US may even work as good as the original laserjet cartridge.

Buying your toners from home (if you live in the U.S.) assures you of the highest quality possible, and saves you the likelihood of fraud. You can more easily bring a fraudulent seller to book if the exchange happened in the U.S.

 

US Toner Makers Uphold High Industry Standards

It’s easy to lose the real meaning “quality,” especially these days that the word gets thrown around without corresponding action or proofs. So what does “premium” or “quality” toner mean?

Back in 2007, PC Magazine reported a research which had appeared on the American Chemical Society’s Environmental Science & Technology (ES&T) journal. The report revealed that toner printers spewed particulate matters equivalent to the volume of fumes a cigarette smoker inhales.

In response to that report, the American OEM toner maker, HP said “HP is currently reviewing the Queensland University of Technology research on particle emission characteristics of office printers. Vigorous tests under standardized operating conditions are an integral part of HP’s research and development and its strict quality control procedures.”

“As part of these quality controls, HP assesses its LaserJet printing systems, original HP print cartridges and papers for dust release and possible material emissions to ensure compliance with applicable international health and safety requirements.”

American OEM toner makers, like HP, are continually improving on their past successes and course-correcting on their mistakes. Toner manufacturers in the US invest a lot of money in R&D. Religiously investing in research and development is the American manufacturer’s advantage in providing the market with the best toner cartridges.

Now, that’s quality!

 

To Wrap this Up

If you’d rather have toners made from durable materials, and that maintain product purity, archivability, and color integrity, then you should consider importing your toners from the US. Toner manufacturing standards are higher in the US than in other countries. The stiff competition within the US toner industry is continually driving prices down and improving the quality of toners.

In case you’re interested in selling your new and unused toner supplies, we buy. Please contact us here to get started.

 

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