Designed with high voume printing needs in mind, the Zebra p330m is a monochrome ID card printer designed to print large quantities of high quality ID cards for schools and universities, retail stores, and large companies.
Astonishing Print Speeds
Did you know the Zebra P330m can print a single-sided ID card in just 5.2 seconds? This, along with Zebra's effortless maintenance, easy user interface and reliable print quality, make the P330m the ideal card printing solution for high volume industries. The P330m ID card printer also features zebra's patent-pending loading hopper, which automatically feeds cards into the printer, relying on the weight of the cards to keep them evenly spaced - no feeding or refilling required!
Uses for the P330m
The P330m's speed and reliability make it perfect for large volume card printing, and applications like
- Retail Stores - The P330m is a handy way for stores to add customized gift cards to their offerings. A gift card program using a P330i can quickly provide handsome, customized gift cards.
- Supermarkets - Customer rewards car ds can be a aluable addition to any grocery store. Use the P330m to quickly create customized reawards cards that serve dual purposes - coupons for the customer, valuable shopping and spending data for you
- Schools and Universities - The P330m's superior print speedmakes it a natural choice for schools and universities, especially during hectic registration days. A mind blowing 5.2 second print time means that the P330m can keep with the constant rush of students looking for ID cards - helping keeping lines moving and stress low
Zebra P330m Features
- USB Connectivity
- Prints up to 10 cards per minute (5.2 seconds for a single-sided card)
- 200-card capacity input hopper
- Easy-to-read LCD screen makes maintenance easy
- OptionalEthernet connectivity for easy networking
- Optional Hi/Lo coercivity magnetic encoding
- Optional Smart Card encoding station
Receive a rebate of up to $400 when you trade in your old ID card printer for a new Zebra model by December 31, 2008. Learn more.
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